2016-08-13

18:07

Saturday Afternoon Chess/Open Thread 08-13-2016 [OregonMuse] [Ace of Spades HQ]

The Chess Players Sir John Lavery, 1929 You can click on the pic to look at a larger version and get a closer look at the game. Looks like White has sacrificed some material to get a space advantage....

Ace of Spades Pet Thread [Ace of Spades HQ]

h/t Maggie's Farm via KT Put the hose down. Towel off the pet and join the Ace of Spades Pet Thread....

Saturday Gardening Thread: Firepits [KT] [Ace of Spades HQ]

Hi there, gardeners and backyard storytellers. The weather has heated up in our valley again, making it feel a little like a firepit, And the air is kind of smoky from wildfires. I have fire on the brain. These are...

Thread below the Gardening Thread: Fire on the Water [KT] [Ace of Spades HQ]

Serving your mid-day open thread needs Blue Whirl, the Friendlier Fire Tornado The Blue Whirl, recently discovered by researchers at the University of Maryland, may make clean-up of oil spills on water less smoky. The little video at the link...

Saturday Morning Weird News [Mis. Hum.] [Ace of Spades HQ]

It's the weekend. Grab a cup of coffee and enjoy the open thread. Just remember, play nice....

EMT 08/13/16 [krakatoa] [Ace of Spades HQ]

Good news: I got a bonus. Bad news: The government got a bonus. With my cut, I can afford to buy little girl a few packages of stickers at the dollar store. Luckily, at 2.5 years, she finds stickers to...

Overnight Open Thread (12 Aug 2016) [Ace of Spades HQ]

Well this is just swell. Obama admin gives green light for Iran to build two new nuclear plants....

Football Friday in America! - Niedermeyer's Dead Horse [Ace of Spades HQ]

I'm keeping it simple. Tonight's matchups (all times ES): Dolphins at Giants 7pm Lions at Steelers 7pm Vikings at Bengals 7:30pm Browns at Packers 8pm Raiders at Cardinals 10pm And, of course, a pretty girl. Kim Guilfoyle's doppelganger? And, heck,...

AM stations deleted [American Bandscan]

The following AM stations have recently changed callsigns:


Evergreen, Alabama 1470 WPNS from WEVG
Robertsdale, Alabama 1000 WJNZ from WDXZ
Bangor, Maine 910 WABK from WAEI
Veazie, Maine 1340 WBAN from WNZS
Evergreen, Montana 1340 KLYW from KQJZ
Astoria, Oregon 1230 KKOR from KVAS

HERE AND ELSEWHERE [Tim Blair]

Australia: Counter-terror police are investigating whether millions of dollars in childcare subsidies allegedly obtained by fraud have been funnelled overseas following a…

HE STUMBLES, HE FALLS, HE BLAMES [Tim Blair]

Bad numbers are becoming worse for Donald Trump: Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton is opening a wider lead in three battleground states,…

LEAST FRIENDLY GAMES SINCE MUNICH [Tim Blair]

Anti-Semitism at the 2016 Olympics is completely out of control. (Via Elaine.)

FEAR AND LOATHING IN THE BUNNINGS CAR PARK [Tim Blair]

I’m all for arresting ABC staff, just on general principles, but it appears that this particular journalist was wrongly detained by Brisbane police:

LOVE KYRGYZSTAN OR LEAVE IT [Tim Blair]

Kyrgyzstan’s government recently launched a banner campaign against Islamic clothing: One side shows women wearing the traditional nomadic clothing of Kyrgyzstan, the…

NATION ON THE MOVE [Tim Blair]

It’s all part of our plan for global conquest: …

“A new governing aristocracy made public deception acceptable” [Chicago Boyz]

Thoughts on the nexus between the growth of government and of an elite governing class, and the rise of flagrant, unaccountable, public lying by politicians and other officials who are members of that class:

…This statistical fact is, however, also a good example how radically this new American “aristocracy” has changed America in recent decades. Even President Obama in his first election campaign, only eight years ago, still categorically rejected the label of being a “socialist” for fear of becoming unelectable. Only eight years later, Bernie Sanders, a declared Socialist would, likely, have become the elected Democratic presidential candidate, had the party leadership not undemocratically conspired against his election.
 
[. . .]
 
Many, maybe even most presidents before Clinton, of course, also have on occasion been less than truthful; but nobody, except of course Nixon (“I am not a crook”), has in recent history so blatantly lied to the American people as Bill Clinton and, yet, gotten away with it, in the process changing American politics for ever by demonstrating that the modern multimedia world practically always offers the opportunity to relativize the truth of the message (to quote Bill Clinton, “it depends what the meaning of ‘is’ is.”).
 
The political “aristocracy” learned this lesson very quickly and, of course, nobody better than Hillary Clinton. She would never have dared to follow through with the absolute insane idea of establishing her own Internet server while serving as Secretary of State, had she not been convinced that she could manipulate the truth, should it be discovered. Piercing her words, as her husband had done so well during the Lewinsky Affair, she, indeed, has successfully avoided indictment by the Justice Department, even though a majority of Americans, likely, believe that she escaped because of special considerations by Obama’s Justice Department. Completely exposed in her deception by the FBI investigation, she, remarkably, still continues to lie in her statements to the public.

Read the whole thing.

Trump and the Disconnected Elites. [Chicago Boyz]

Peggy Noonan has an excellent column today suggesting she understands why Trump is popular with the non-elite countrymen (and women).

She discusses Angela Merkel and her invitation to Muslims to invade Germany.

Last summer when Europe was engulfed with increasing waves of migrants and refugees from Muslim countries, Ms. Merkel, moving unilaterally, announced that Germany would take in an astounding 800,000. Naturally this was taken as an invitation, and more than a million came. The result has been widespread public furor over crime, cultural dissimilation and fears of terrorism. From such a sturdy, grounded character as Ms. Merkel the decision was puzzling—uncharacteristically romantic about people, how they live their lives, and history itself, which is more charnel house than settlement house.

Germans are unhappy about the behavior of Muslim men, the majority of the immigrants.They are not happy.

The anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD), now the third-most popular political party in Germany, adopted a manifesto calling for curbs to migration and restrictions on Islam. The document calls for a ban on minarets, Muslim calls to prayer and full-face veils.

May 2. Hans-Georg Maaßen, the head of Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, revealed that around 90 “predominately Arabic-speaking” mosques in Germany are under surveillance. He said they involve mostly “backyard mosques” where “self-proclaimed imams and self-proclaimed emirs” are “inciting their followers to jihad.” He called on moderate Muslims to work with the government to fight extremism and defend the constitutional order. Maaßen was speaking ahead of a security conference in Berlin at which he said that his agency we receiving on average four terror alerts every day: “The Islamic State is committed to attacking Germany and German interests.”

Missus Merkel is unmoved.

As the daughter of a Lutheran minister, someone who grew up in East Germany, Ms. Merkel would have natural sympathy for those who feel marginalized and displaced. Moreover she is attempting to provide a kind of counter-statement, in the 21st century, to Germany’s great sin of the 20th. The historical stain of Nazism, the murder and abuse of the minority, will be followed by the moral triumph of open arms toward the dispossessed. That’s what’s driving it, said the acquaintance.

Of course, Mrs Merkel is not opening her own arms. She is opening those of German citizens.

Ms. Merkel had put the entire burden of a huge cultural change not on herself and those like her but on regular people who live closer to the edge, who do not have the resources to meet the burden, who have no particular protection or money or connections. Ms. Merkel, her cabinet and government, the media and cultural apparatus that lauded her decision were not in the least affected by it and likely never would be.

The government is not amused by allegations that the Muslim “guests” are not behaving themselves.

During an investigation into the mass sexual assaults in Cologne on New Year’s Eve, a chief superintendent from the Cologne police department revealed that he was ordered to remove the term “rape” from an internal police report about the assaults. The superintendent, identified only as Jürgen H., said that he received a telephone call on January 1 from an official at the interior ministry in North-Rhine Westphalia, who told him in an angry tone: “This is not rape. Remove this term from your report. Submit a new report.” The revelation adds to suspicions that there was a political cover-up to avoid fueling anti-immigration sentiments.

Ms Merkel, of course, was not at risk of rape.

What does this have to do with Trump? Well, aside from his statements about Muslim immigrants, it is an indicator of why he is doing as well as he is.

The challenge of integrating different cultures, negotiating daily tensions, dealing with crime and extremism and fearfulness on the street—that was put on those with comparatively little, whom I’ve called the unprotected. They were left to struggle, not gradually and over the years but suddenly and in an air of ongoing crisis that shows no signs of ending—because nobody cares about them enough to stop it.

The powerful show no particular sign of worrying about any of this. When the working and middle class pushed back in shocked indignation, the people on top called them “xenophobic,” “narrow-minded,” “racist.” The detached, who made the decisions and bore none of the costs, got to be called “humanist,” “compassionate,” and “hero of human rights.”

Who do you think the chief “xenophobe is?” The Huffington Post is happy to tell you.

Trump personifies a fear and hatred of “the other” embodied by some of our history’s more frightening and despicable figures: Father Coughlin, Joseph McCarthy, George Wallace. This has led to some of our most shameful chapters — lynchings, anti-immigrant violence, the internment of Japanese-Americans. Because such tragedies are so searing, we view them as unique.

But they do not arise from nowhere. Nor did Donald Trump. Those who are shocked by his success have given scant notice to the darker forces which stain our society and roil our politics. Or, more likely, they pretended not to notice.

The “dark forces” are the impression by the average citizen that elites care nothing about their concerns.

The larger point is that this is something we are seeing all over, the top detaching itself from the bottom, feeling little loyalty to it or affiliation with it. It is a theme I see working its way throughout the West’s power centers. At its heart it is not only a detachment from, but a lack of interest in, the lives of your countrymen, of those who are not at the table, and who understand that they’ve been abandoned by their leaders’ selfishness and mad virtue-signalling.

On Wall Street, where they used to make statesmen, they now barely make citizens. CEOs are consumed with short-term thinking, stock prices, quarterly profits. They don’t really believe that they have to be involved with “America” now; they see their job as thinking globally and meeting shareholder expectations.

They are not acting or thinking as Americans and it shows.

Affluence detaches, power adds distance to experience. I don’t have it fully right in my mind but something big is happening here with this division between the leaders and the led. It is very much a feature of our age. But it is odd that our elites have abandoned or are abandoning the idea that they belong to a country, that they have ties that bring responsibilities, that they should feel loyalty to their people or, at the very least, a grounded respect.

Exactly, and the Huffington Post and its readers have no clue. HuffPo again:

On learning that a homophobic American Muslim had slaughtered 49 LGBT fellow citizens, Trump’s first reaction was to congratulate himself for being “right on radical Islamic terrorism.” He then proceeded to trumpet his proposal for banning Muslim immigrants by — as is his practice — lying about the immigration process.

While Hillary Clinton has the father of the homophobic murderer on the stage at her rally.

WPTV-Mateen-behind-Clinton_1470715668266_43966615_ver1.0_640_480

Why was he there ? It was no accident. He was featured by her campaign.

This is certainly a weird election. Richard Fernandez has a theory.

But the curtain has gone up and now the audience is in shock. How? How? Even the administration’s supporters were left totally surprised by the trail of disasters so intense it propelled Donald Trump to a presidential nomination. Jesse Bernstein in Tablet thinks that the root cause of the blindness was insufferable smugness of the intellectual elite. Jon Stewart’s “Culture of Ridicule”, Bernstein wrote, left kept the best and the brightest from seeing the train wreck coming. “No single event or trend initiated the takeoff of Space Shuttle Trump. … but there is one culprit who … who deserves his due: Jon Stewart. Let me explain. … As Emmet Rensin so perfectly put it:

Finding comfort in the notion that their former allies were disdainful, hapless rubes, smug liberals created a culture animated by that contempt. The result is a self-fulfilling prophecy. … Over 20 years, an industry arose to cater to the smug style … and culminated for a time in The Daily Show, a program that more than any other thing advanced the idea that liberal orthodoxy was a kind of educated savvy and that is opponents were, before anything else, stupid.

But to anyone outside the echo chamber the joke was on Stewart and his cronies.

Read the rest, as they say. See what Oz looks like when the curtain goes up.

it was these ineffably superior people who were the jokers, the clowns whose only tangible skill was to make fun of everybody so nobody would notice that’s all they were good for. In fact the only person they could stop with any probability of success and only if they ganged up on him was Donald Trump. That was it. They can’t see the audience in darkness beyond the footlights heading for the exits.

And so we go on to the election.

faramosh: Women are conditioned since we are young that our final stage of fulfillment comes from... [Dannibelle]

faramosh:

Women are conditioned since we are young that our final stage of fulfillment comes from finding love. We could be 25, successful and self-made, but at the end of the day people won’t see us as someone who made it so far in just 25 years, but how someone lived 25 years without finding a man. To every single woman out there who is working hard and grinding to achieve their goals- your success is valid. You as a woman are valid. And I pray there is only more and more success written for you in everything you pursue.

nuhstalgicsoul: Celebrated with some acroyoga at the top of the... [Dannibelle]



nuhstalgicsoul:

Celebrated with some acroyoga at the top of the hike to Chilnaualna Falls in Yosemite National Park!

Hi Danni I wanted to know if you consider yourself as a feminist ? And what advice can you give to convince girls that they do not need boys to be happy ? [Dannibelle]

Feminism is the doctrine advocating social, political and all other rights of women equal to those of men. So yes, I consider myself a feminist within this meaning. I believe women and men should be equal in all aspects of life. I think there’s a misconception of feminism as the oppression of males but it is simply equality for both sexes. Allowing men to express their emotions, pain and vulnerability is just as important as allowing women to do so. But my belief in equality extends further than female empowerment, I believe in equality for all gender, race and sexuality.

My choice to not be with someone at this stage in my life is because I value my independence. At the moment I’m working on myself and my future and I don’t have time to devote to a relationship. I consider myself a hard working woman and I will continue to work hard to achieve my goals. I believe independence is a choice and I would encourage everyone to be independent and secure within themselves. I think it’s so important to be your own person; this makes you strong and self-assured. I believe I will eventually find someone who embraces who I am as a person but is independent of me - secure and ambitious in their own right. I will never allow someone to control me or change who I am. It’s wonderful if you eventually find someone or have already found someone who loves, supports and encourages you to pursue your passions. I’m not saying you have to be single in order to succeed, rather that you need to know who you are independently of someone else. Never let your happiness depend of another, you don’t need anyone to be complete - you, as an individual, already are - that’s my advice. 

Sorry I know someone asked you this before but I can't seem to find it but how much to you run each day? And do you workout after? [Dannibelle]

I’ve changed up my workouts a little bit in recent weeks, I run as a warm up for strength/HIIT training :) I will be releasing an ebook soon with all my updated workouts! I’ve found the best results through my new training regime and I’m excited to share it with everyone <3 

Hi Dannibelle, I always love your outfits & swimsuits! Can you share where you shop most? Especially your bikinis since I'm always looking for a good one. Love your posts, so motivating! Thanks, Yaz :) [Dannibelle]

Hi Yaz :) I shop around a little, always on the lookout for new styles. I get a lot of my activewear from Stylerunner or ASOS. My swimwear is from various brands and online stores but some of my favourites are: Myra Swim, Boys and Arrows and Frankie Swimwear xx

Hey This is Komal from India 🇮🇳 I am a dentist I wanna send lots of love to you..you are gorgeous You inspire me 💜 [Dannibelle]

Firstly, congratulations! A career in dentistry is an outstanding achievement! :D And thank you, sending love from Australia xxx 

youngblackandvegan: if the choice is between a guy and your education, always pick the... [Dannibelle]

youngblackandvegan:

if the choice is between a guy and your education, always pick the education.

always

freed-fairy: Being an adult is a constant battle of knowing you don’t really need to make chocolate... [Dannibelle]

freed-fairy:

Being an adult is a constant battle of knowing you don’t really need to make chocolate chip cookies at ten o'clock at night but you also really need to make chocolate chip cookies at ten o'clock at night.

Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) [Daring Fireball]

My thanks to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation for sponsoring this week’s DF RSS feed. Are you running Docker containers in production? Ready to share your story with the industry’s top developers, end users, and vendors?

Cloud native computing uses an open source software stack to deploy applications as microservices, packaging each part into its own container, and dynamically orchestrating those containers to optimize resource utilization. CNCF hosts critical components of that software stack including Kubernetes and Prometheus and serves as a neutral home for collaboration. CNCF is looking for new members, and especially end users of cloud native technologies.

If that describes you, check them out and join today.

EDXC 2016 Conference comes to Manchester 9-13 Sept [DX International radio]


 

Firstly, apologies for the lack of posts here of late. I've been uber busy, with the day job, my RadioUser columns, editing BDXC Communciation each month, plus family commitments, a relationship and a busy social life, not to mention all of my campaigning activities and a holiday in Nice, one in Tywyn and other summer travels too. I'm not complaining though, far from it- I can only function if I'm busy.

Anyway, another reason for the tumbleweed blowing across this blog is my preparation for the EDXC Conference, which has distracted me from posting here. The DX publicity machine is doing its job though, with the Radio-Kurier journal in Germany the latest I've seen to mention EDXC 2016 (photo above).

The latest programme and details of how to join us at what should be a very exciting conference are at the EDXC site, with this link taking you to all the conference related posts.



Software Freedom Doesn't Kill People, Your Security Through Obscurity Kills People [Bradley M. Kuhn's Blog ( bkuhn )]

The time has come that I must speak out against the inappropriate rhetoric used by those who (ostensibly) advocate for FLOSS usage in automotive applications.

There was a catalyst that convinced me to finally speak up. I heard a talk today from a company representative of a software supplier for the automotive industry. He said during his talk: putting GPLv3 software in cars will kill people and opening up the source code to cars will cause more harm than good. These statements are completely disingenuous. Most importantly, it ignores the fact that proprietary software in cars is at least equally, if not more, dangerous. At least one person has already been killed in a crash while using a proprietary software auto-control system. Volkswagen decided to take a different route; they decided to kill us all slowly (rather than quickly) by using proprietary software to lie about their emissions and illegally polluting our air.

Meanwhile, there has been not a single example yet about use of GPLv3 software that has harmed anyone. If you have such an example, email it to me and I promise to add it right here to this blog post.

So, to the auto industry folks and vendors who market to/for them: until you can prove that proprietary software assures safety in a way that FLOSS cannot, I will continue to tell you this: in the long and sad tradition of the Therac 25, your proprietary software has killed people, both quickly and slowly, and your attacks on GPLv3 and software freedom are not only unwarranted, they are clearly part of a political strategy to divert attention from your own industry's bad behavior and graft unfair blame onto FLOSS.

As a side note, during the talk's Q&A session, I asked this company's representatives how they assure compliance with the GPLv2 — particularly their compliance with provision of scripts used to control compilation and installation of the executable, which are so often missing for many products, including vehicles. The official answer was: Oh, I don't know. Not only does this company publicly claim security through obscurity is a viable solution, accuse copyleft advocates of endangering the public safety, they also seem to have not fully learned the lessons of making FLOSS license compliance a clear part of their workflow.

This is, unfortunately, my general impression of the status of the automotive industry.

SpaceX seeks to continue its hot streak with tonight’s Falcon 9 launch [Ars Technica]

(credit: SpaceX)

SpaceX hopes to continue increasing the frequency of its rocket business with a Sunday launch. The two-hour launch window for the company's Falcon 9 rocket opens at 1:26am ET on Sunday, as SpaceX endeavors to deliver the JCSAT-16 commercial communications satellite to geostationary transfer orbit.

After seven successful launches in 2016, SpaceX has already broken its previous mark for successful rocket missions during a calendar year, six. Sunday morning's attempt comes a little less than one month after the last flight of the Falcon 9 on July 18, when the Dragon spacecraft delivered two tons of supplies to the International Space Station. Considering the company's launch manifest through December, it is possible SpaceX will make a dozen or more flights of its Falcon 9 rocket in 2016, coming close to reaching its stated goal of a launching once every other week by the end of this year.

The other big question tonight again surrounds the company's prospects for a successful return of its Falcon 9 first stage to Earth. Because the rocket will be delivering the satellite to an altitude of 35,800km above the equator, the first stage must reach a high velocity before releasing its upper stage and payload into orbit.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Outside experts ding EPA fracking report’s optimistic conclusions [Ars Technica]

Last year, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released the draft of a major report on the practice of hydraulic fracking—a technique to harvest oil and natural gas trapped within shale rocks. Although the report is only a draft, it was four years in the making and represents one of the first formal evaluations of fracking in the US as a whole.

In general, the EPA report is positive. While various problems with fracking are brought up, the report seems to suggest that the technique has no systemic issues. With proper caution, the evaluation says, it should be possible to frack while keeping water sources safe.

Or, to use the EPA's own words:

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Single mutation changes a species’ mating [Ars Technica]

(credit: Tao lab, Emory University)

When evolution hits on a solution that works, that solution tends to get reused. Researchers have found that genes that play key roles in development typically get deployed over and over again in different tissues. Once this happens, however, it can create a problem: you can't make major changes to the gene without messing up a whole lot of essential processes.

This week, however, a team of researchers from the Janelia Research Campus describe a case in which an essential gene that's critical for neural activity was tweaked in an incredibly subtle and specific way. The new version of the gene changed only a single feature of the species it evolved in: the details of the male courtship song.

You might not think fruit flies would do much in the way of singing, and they don't in the traditional sense. But their courtship behavior involves a song created by rapid vibrations of their wings. The song is a mixture of repeated chirps interspersed with longer, buzzing vibrations. The details of this song—the frequency of the buzzing, the space between the chirps, etc.—often varies among the dozens of species of Drosophila we've identified.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

The hottest new board games from Gen Con 2016 [Ars Technica]

Gen Con bills itself as "the best four days in gaming"—and in many ways, it is. More than 60,000 people crammed into the Indiana Convention Center in downtown Indianapolis to play, purchase, and demo the hottest new board games and RPGs releasing in 2016. The Ars crew spent several days at the show drowning in a delicious gaming gumbo; now that we're back, we've put together a list of the top titles we played at the show.

If you're looking for a solid overview of what's hot in board gaming for the second half of 2016, you've come to the right place. (And stay tuned for our coverage of the Essen Spiel fair in October for all your Eurogame needs.)

Unless otherwise noted, these games should be hitting store shelves soon.

Read 90 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Irish court orders alleged Silk Road admin to be extradited to US [Ars Technica]

(credit: Alistair)

A 27-year-old Irishman who American prosecutors believe was a top administrator on Silk Road named “Libertas” has been approved for extradition to the United States.

According to the Irish Times, a High Court judge ordered Gary Davis to be handed over to American authorities on Friday.

In December 2013, federal prosecutors in New York unveiled charges against Davis and two other Silk Road staffers, Andrew Michael Jones (“Inigo”) and Peter Phillip Nash (“Samesamebutdifferent”). They were all charged with narcotics trafficking conspiracy, computer hacking conspiracy, and money laundering conspiracy.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Can 42 US, a free coding school run by a French billionaire, actually work? [Ars Technica]

Ars visits 42 US. Filmed by Chris Schodt/Edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)

FREMONT, Calif.—As you read these words, hundreds of students are hunched over iMacs in a massive computer lab. Most of them have little, if any, programming experience, and they haven’t paid a cent to get here.

And yet, here they sit, just 7.6 miles directly across the Dumbarton Bridge from Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, dreaming of joining Silicon Valley’s legions of programmers. Each day, the students get new programming assignments, but there are no teachers. There is a help desk, or rather a “help” desk—which really, really doesn’t want students to ask for guidance—all in the name of “peer-to-peer learning.”

Read 32 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Guccifer 2.0 doxes hundreds of House Democrats with massive document dump [Ars Technica]

On Friday, the online persona behind a high-profile hack of the Democratic National Committee took credit for a separate breach of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. To prove they were responsible, the leaker known as Guccifer 2.0 published a massive amount of personal information belonging to hundreds of Democratic representatives.

One Excel spreadsheet contains a dizzying amount of work and cell phone numbers, home addresses, official and personal e-mail addresses, names of staffers, and other personal information for the entire roster of Democratic representatives. Several other documents contain passwords for various DCCC accounts. Other documents purport to be memos detailing fund raisers and campaign overviews.

"As you see the US presidential elections are becoming a farce, a big political performance where the voters are far from playing the leading role," Guccifer 2.0 wrote in a blog post accompanying the document dump. "Everything is being settled behind the scenes as it was with Bernie Sanders."

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Clinton Cash Now in A Graphic Novel [BlackFive]

It’s a bird. It’s a plane. It’s Superwoman. Actually, it’s super corrupt Hillary Clinton and her responses are like the Joker. Taking an already powerful non-fiction book, this graphic novel, Clinton Cash, allows for the facts to be visually expressed. The authors understood that not everyone has the time to plow through a factually based book, so they put forth their evidence in a humorous short, snappy, and clear way to expose the vastness of the evil and corrupt global Clinton Machine. Those that worked on this graphic novel have an impressive resume. Chuck Dixon is best known for working on the Batman comics in the 1990s as well as The Punisher and the Simpsons. Brett R. Smith is a storyboard and commercial artist. He has worked with Marvel and DC Entertainment, Hasbro, and the Cartoon Network to name a few that have included The Avengers, Superman, GI Joe, and Wolverine. It is obvious the writers, illustrators, and artists did a phenomenal job. People should not forget how the Clintons amassed their vast financial empire. This graphic novel shows the connection between their personal fortune, friends, the Clinton Foundation, and foreign nations. Payments to the Clinton Foundation and to Bill Clinton through high speaking fees by foreign entities ultimately received favors from Hillary Clinton’s State Department in return. Schweizer believes the Clintons have been brazenly dishonest with the American people, “They are so convinced of their own moral purity and superiority the money they make is wrapped in the cloak of philanthropy and camouflaged through charity. This is a constant pattern that is seen over and over again, the systemic approach, which should be damning. When they established the Clinton Foundation, the Clinton Global Initiative, when Bill Clinton hit the lecture circuit while his wife was Secretary of State, there was an avenue for oligarchs in Russia, Nigeria, and Latin America to have influence. I think the evidence is pretty clear they gave a lot of money, and that favorable actions were taken by Hillary Clinton for their benefit.” Brett R. Smith stated to blackfive.net, “I am outraged because Hillary Clinton is no doubt the most corrupt political candidate of our lifetime. I believe satire is the most dangerous kind of humor that can be engaged in. We used the left’s game and turned it right back on them. The left should not own pop culture. I think we have connected with younger readers since we are in the top 100 with teens. Those of us who grew up reading comics as well as many in their twenties will be able to see the facts in this form. Our goal was to show the other side of Hillary Clinton that mainstream media never speaks of.” To have a common thread, probably the only part that is fictional, the authors decided to use a Haitian family tell their story throughout, and how the Clinton Foundation affected them. The truth as portrayed by this family is that many were left out to dry by the graft and corruption of the Clintons and their friends.. One of Brett’s favorites is the politician standing in front of the podium wearing a Uranium 1 hat with the American flag in the background and the stars replaced by a hash tag. But other highlights include the Clintons playing golf with Khamenei and company, Hillary and Bill taking a camel ride, or in a Rainforest getting rich. But the page entitled “the Clinton Blur” is possibly one of the best, a parody that shows Bill Clinton as the “Flash,” reminiscent of the old time comic book. The panels are also informative. For example, the texts saying “Isn’t it troubling that Bill was being paid by a private corporation that was also benefitting from state department actions…Isn’t it troubling that this conflict of interest was not disclosed.” Because Brett wanted to appeal to the curiosity seeker he noted there are hidden meanings in the background of the artwork. For example, in the Re-set chapter, Russian President Vladimir Putin is playing poker with Hillary Clinton. The gold bracelet he uses for a bet is seen again a few panels down now being worn by Hillary. Schweizer wants to warn Americans that a precedent has been set, “A way for politicians to make a lot of money while in office. If you are heading an agency or in Congress and I give you $10,000 that would be considered a bribe, but if I hire your spouse to speak for $10,000 that is not a bribe? This is a ridiculous difference. Any Cabinet officer in the US government or someone serving in Congress should not be allowed to have a private foundation that takes foreign money, nor a family member who collects speaking fees.” The graphic novel inspired by the New York Times bestseller of the same name is stunningly illustrated, hilarious, fresh, interesting, and authentic. It brings to life Bill and Hillary Clinton’s fleecing of the US and putting its national security at risk.

Book Review-INSIDIOUS BY Catherine Coulter [BlackFive]

INSIDIOUS by Catherine Coulter brings back FBI agents Savich and Sherlock, as well as introducing Special Agent Cam Wittier and Detective Daniel Montoya. As with most of her books there are two plot lines that keep readers engaged. What makes the FBI series special is the blending of humor within the riveting storylines. In INSIDIOUS, the humor starts even before page one. In the Acknowledgments section she thanks Ski Ludwikowski (a longtime reader) for “recommending Sherlock’s birthday present from Savich, a new ankle piece, the 9 mm Glock 43. Sherlock is really enjoying it, fast-drawing between floors on the elevator.” Coulter said to blackfive.net, “Ski can always be counted on to tell me the pros and cons of using certain weapons in certain situations. Ski told me Sherlock’s ankle piece, a Lady Colt, wasn’t as light and small and accurate as the Glock. And, as you’ll see, she really likes it. And who would not like such a birthday present? Actually I got a Glock 17 for my birthday, but not from Ski, but from my other half.” In INSIDIOUS, Savich and Sherlock must discover who is trying to murder Venus Rasmussen, a powerful, wealthy Washington icon who heads up an international conglomerate, Rasmussen Industries. Arsenic poisoning followed by a direct assassination attempt at her home. Is it one of her family? Perhaps her prodigal grandson, returned after ten years? Readers will like the Venus character. She’s eighty-six and a role model, proving that age simply isn’t important. Coulter said, “In promotion, I didn’t let out her age, because there is indeed age discrimination, and a tendency to regard older people as irrelevant. I knew that once readers met her, age would become irrelevant.” The other plot has Savich sending Special Agent Cam Wittier to Los Angeles to head the investigation for the serial killer known as the Starlet Slasher and work with a local detective, Daniel Montoya. They are trying to find who is responsible for the horrendous murders of actresses. As with most of Coulter’s “new” characters, readers will want Cam to return. Coulter said, “Fear not. In the next FBI thriller, Enigma, she will be front and center." Both storylines are exciting and gripping, making it difficult to prefer one mystery over the other. This is another winner by the New York Times bestselling author. Readers should be prepared to laugh, to care about these characters, as they try to solve the two mysteries. Coulter really enjoys hearing from her readers: Every morning, she checks in at her reader page at Facebook.com/catherinecoulterbooks or she can be emailed at ReadMoi@gmail.com

Book Review-Midnight In Berlin by James MacManus [BlackFive]

The following book review is a special for BlackFive readers provided by Elise Cooper. You can read all of our book reviews and author interviews by clicking on the Books category link in the right side bar. Midnight In Berlin by James MacManus is a fictional story that takes readers through the harrowing months that ultimately led up to WWII. It is a historical novel with emphasis on the history. With a degree in American history it is evident that the author used his knowledge and research to make a captivating plot. MacManus noted to blackfive.net, “I did not set out to write a book that would educate or teach moral lessons. Yet, there are lessons to be drawn from what happened in the 1930s, with this period of appeasement fascinating. It is relevant today because it shows how the establishment wanted to remain in power by pushing their misguided agenda while attempting to silence those who disagreed. There was also the West turning a blind eye to the Germans brutalizing the Jews. I hope I got this point across with a quote from the book, ‘For a Jew in Germany there was no future worth waiting for. The future has been cancelled.’ And today in Europe there is renewed Anti-Semitism.” While the plot does have elements of romance it concentrates on 1939 Berlin and what was going on behind the scenes with regard to diplomacy. This book shows within an intense story how the appeasers caved in to the Nazis. They were weak and naive, choosing to put their blinders on and to get in bed with Hitler and his goons. Real life characters, notably British Prime Minister Sir Neville Chamberlain and the British ambassador to Berlin, Sir Nevile Henderson, never had the courage and boldness later exhibited by Chamberlain’s successor Winston Churchill to stop Hitler’s war machine. The one who recognized the realistic situation was the novel’s main character, Colonel Noel Macrae, based on real life Colonel Mason-Macfarlane who was the British military attaché in Berlin during the critical years 1938 and 1939. Several other historical figures from this period in time are in the novel: Kitty Schmidt owner of the Nazi bordello Kitty, Gestapo Reinhard Heydrich, and journalist William Shirer. The story appears to be built around the ultimate decision of Macrae, to assassinate Hitler. MacManus commented, “As with the real-life Colonel, Macrae saw what was happening, that appeasement was not working which would make war inevitable. I hope I portrayed him as a tortured man. He tried to convince his own government that Hitler wanted to expand throughout Europe. He chose to stand up and do something to save humanity.” These figures blend well with the fictional characters. The story showed the sacrifices of those who hoped to stop the war, by sounding the alarm of an approaching conflict. Macrae finds himself trapped between the blind policies of his government and the dark world of betrayal and deception in Berlin both professionally and personally. With his own marriage to Primrose imploding, it becomes apparent their relationship has chilled to the point both look for love elsewhere. The Gestapo, aware of Macrae’s hostility, seeks to compromise him in their infamous brothel. There, Macrae meets and falls in love with Sara, a Jewish woman blackmailed into becoming a Nazi courtesan. She has prostituted herself to keep her jailed twin brother from execution. Through the storyline of Macrae trying to rescue Sara readers will understand the plight of German Jews and the different ways they tried to escape before Hitler closed the border. Sara was based on a friend of MacManus. “I gave Sara the same last name of my friend. She had told me of her family’s experience in Nazi Germany and how they escaped. The Nazis had the common practice of taking a family member, putting them in a camp, and then using that as blackmail to make the other family members behave. I hope readers realize the moral dilemma: do they save themselves at the expense of their family or sacrifice themselves for their family. Sara was trapped, caged, and desperate.” MacManus blends politics, murder, corruption, courage, and sacrifice into this storyline. Readers become flies on the wall, spectators to the events leading the world to the brink of war.

Book Review-Secrets Of Nanreath Hall [BlackFive]

The following book review is a special for BlackFive readers provided by Elise Cooper. You can read all of our book reviews and author interviews by clicking on the Books category link in the right side bar. Secrets Of Nanreath is the debut historical novel by Alix Rickloff. This intriguing mystery involves family secrets revolving around the triumphant and tragic lives of a mother and daughter as they search for their identities. Within the backdrop of both World Wars readers will understand the time period and how the wars affected the British population and the class system. This mother/daughter story is told in alternating chapters. Rickloff shows how one generation’s actions and decisions will affect the other. The mother Katherine, who lives during World War I, leaves her family behind while her daughter Anna, during the Second World War, attempts to return to the family. Lady Katherine Trenowyth grows up with all of the privileges of being the daughter of an Earl. She meets an artist’s assistant, Simon Halliday, who encourages her to follow her dreams of becoming an artist and living with him, the man she loves. With his support she runs away from all she knows. But everything begins to fall apart, and Katherine finds herself destitute and alone. Her daughter Anna, only six, when Katherine dies, is assigned to the military hospital that has set up camp inside her biological mother’s childhood home, Nanreath Hall. As Anna is drawn into her newfound family’s lives and their tangled loyalties, she must decide if the secrets of the past are too dangerous to unearth, and if the family she’s discovered is one she can be a part of. Rickloff was inspired to write this story by watching the Downtown Abby TV series. “I was looking at the three children that included the fatherless heir who had an over protective mother and the daughter of a scandalous elopement. They intrigued me, especially since they would come of age during the World War. As I started to do the research it became apparent those in Britain would do whatever they could to help the war effort. There was no disconnect between the military and the civilian population.” Readers will be reminded of the horrors of each World War. Two quotes hammer the point home. Simon on leave from fighting in WWI was described, “I felt his tremors quick and sharp, his breathing labored and rasping hot against my shoulder. Panicked like a wild thing caught and frozen by the hunter’s lamp.” Or Anna’s description of those who fought in WWII, “The men come in caked head to foot in filth. Some are terrified or weeping for their mothers. Others are deathly quiet.” The author reflects not only about the battle worn soldier, but the English civilian population who had to endure as part of their daily routine the German blitz of bombs. Rickloff noted to blackfive.net, “The everyday German bombings became a normal fragment of life. The population just adjusted. In my research I saw pictures of stores half blown up and said ‘still open.’ I find this fascinating.” Through Katherine’s bucking of societal norms readers get a glimpse of the difference between the classes. This pampered Earl’s daughter wants to follow her own choices, choosing a daring and uncertain future of becoming an artist, and to marry someone of her choice. The symbolism of the dual portraits of her shows both of her sides. In the one commissioned by her family she is Lady Katherine, appearing to have turned away from the confining expectations, while the one painted by her lover Simon, shows her wild and independent side. Katherine’s feelings are expressed in this quote, “I didn’t want to be Lady Katherine, whose fear held her captive. I wanted to be plain Kitty Trenowyth with the courage to fly.” When asked, Rickloff commented, “I do not think of her as rebellious. She did not start out thinking, ‘I am going to turn my life inside out.’ Yet, she wanted to be her own person, not stuffed into a box by circumstance or birth. She wanted to find her own path and did not want to be confined to what everyone expected of her.” Rickloff gave readers a heads up about her next book, “In essence, it’s sort of a buddy road-trip book set against the backdrop of the WWII British home front. I had a blast writing both Lucy, a socialite, and her twelve year old delinquent sidekick in crime, Bill.” Turning to writing historical novels, Rickloff allows her characters to face events in the shadow of the World Wars. Secrets Of Nanreath is an enthralling mystery involving family, lies, forgiveness, and loyalty. There is also the added bonus of learning a little about the time periods where readers are able to compare and contrast the events surrounding each World War.

A Waste Of Perfectly Good Irony [JustOneMinute]

The Times opens what looks like a large, six-part elegy for Obama (Metaphor! Please don't anyone shoot the SOB!) with this: Once Skeptical of Executive Power, Obama Has Come to Embrace It Mr. Obama will leave the White House as...

Health Insurance Markets Fade To Red [JustOneMinute]

The Times saves this vivisection of the ObamaCare insurance exchanges for a summertime Saturday think piece: Cost, Not Choice, Is Top Concern of Health Insurance Customers By Reed Abelson Aug 13 2016 It is all about the price. Millions of...

Attention @MGTOW: Survey Question [The Other McCain]

“Men Going Their Own Way” (MGTOW) is a segment of the so-called “manosphere,” the loose coalition of online resistance to feminism that includes also men’s rights activists (MRAs) and pickup artists (PUAs) and various advocates of what is known as “Red Pill” philosophy. There is a website (MGTOW.com) with a Twitter account (@MGTOW) specifically aimed […]

The Intellectuals and Feminism: Why Do Fantasies of Sexual ‘Equality’ Persist? [The Other McCain]

  Men and women are different — biologically, as a matter of science — and the differences between the sexes are socially significant. Feminism seeks to impose a politically constructed regime of “equality” between men and women. This project is essentially destructive, resulting in the loss of social cohesion and an increase of sexual hostility. […]

In The Mailbox: 08.12.16 [The Other McCain]

— compiled by Wombat-socho OVER THE TRANSOM EBL: Making Tacos Great Again – Salma Hayek And Sausage Party Twitchy: The Media’s breathless Over Trump’s ISIS Remarks, But Where Were They When THIS Happened? A Pius Geek: A Flight Of Dragon Award Reactions According To Hoyt: Centrists RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES Adam Piggott: Podcast Episode #13 […]

Of course, down on the Rez... [halls of macadamia]

...they call that... "Tuesday"...first ninja

"RCMP have arrested a 17-year-old from the Frog Lake First Nation after an altercation that involved three dogs, a sword, an ATV and a shotgun."

Orwell was right [halls of macadamia]

I guess some walls are more egalitarian than others...hillary rotten clinton



"The Mashco had a ritual greeting: they hugged visitors, put their heads on their shoulders, and then felt inside their clothing, as if to ascertain their sex." [Althouse]

"For perhaps forty minutes, the two groups mingled: the Mashco touching and probing, and the Nomole team acquiescing, mostly in good humor. The Mashco women approached Flores and, as she giggled, touched her breasts and stomach... When I asked Flores about the women, she put a hand to her mouth in embarrassment. 'They felt my breasts and stomach and said to me, 'You’re pregnant, aren’t you?' When I said, ‘No, I’m not,’ they said, ‘Tell us the truth! Don’t you have milk?’ When I said no, Knoygonro squirted her milk in my face, to say, ‘I do.’ ”

From "AN ISOLATED TRIBE EMERGES FROM THE RAIN FOREST/In Peru, an unsolved killing has brought the Mashco Piro into contact with the outside world," by Jon Lee Anderson in The New Yorker.

Obscure Olympic moment of the day. [Althouse]

P1110618

Something I photographed today from the TV, after a track bike event. The Chinese athletes — unlike everyone else — have faces painted on the tops of their helmet, and I caught a moment of repose after a race, a rider with her coach (I assume it's the coach).

Here's an article in Weibo about the helmets:

Besides serving as safety gear, the helmets promoted China by portraying typically Chinese Peking Opera masks that, according to state media, conveyed China’s “national essence” and, in this way, could “show the world” this image of China – as China Daily wrote. The female cycling helmets portrayed the Peking Opera facial masks of Hua Mulan (花木兰) and Mu Guiying (穆桂英), two legendary Chinese war heroines....

"New Study Reveals That the Washington Post Is Eager to Dismiss Economic Explanations for Trump’s Rise." [Althouse]

Headline for a New York Magazine piece by Eric Levitz, who begins:

Donald Trump’s supporters tend to live in economically depressed areas where white residents experience exceptionally high rates of mortality — and exceptionally low rates of social mobility — according to a new study from Gallup.

Some might view these findings as evidence that “economic anxiety” among the white working-class has contributed to Donald Trump’s rise. The Washington Post, however, sees them as evidence of the opposite. Or, more precisely, one of their headline writers does.

The paper titled its write-up of Gallup’s analysis thusly: A massive new study debunks a widespread theory for Donald Trump’s success. The article defines that theory as the idea that “economic distress and anxiety across working-class white America” is a valid explanation for Trump’s political appeal. But, as the actual copy of the piece makes clear, Gallup’s analysis does not “debunk” that idea; the study merely complicates it...

At the 11-Years-Ago Café... [Althouse]

Café

... you can talk about anything you like. Have a good Saturday! I'm posting an old photo that I noticed because somebody at Flickr just "liked" it and I can seem to get Flickr to accept something else that I'm trying to upload. It's that kind of day, perhaps. It's overcast and cool, in a pre-rain sort of way, but the forecast says no rain.

"An army of lawyers working under Mr. Obama’s authority.... has imposed billions of dollars in new costs on businesses and consumers." [Althouse]

"Many of the new rules are little known, even as they affect the way Americans eat, love and die. People can dine on genetically engineered salmon. Women can buy emergency contraceptive pills without prescriptions. Military veterans can design their own headstones."

From "Once Skeptical of Executive Power, Obama Has Come to Embrace It/Mr. Obama will leave the White House as one of the most prolific authors of major regulations in presidential history" (in the NYT).

"For most politicians, a call-it-as-you-see-it approach has limits: Candidates who offend too many voters, or look overly impulsive or intemperate, generally lose." [Althouse]

"But Mr. Trump believes that voters who have seen hard times in their communities will embrace him as a truth teller."

Paragraph 25 of a 28 paragraph NYT article titled "Donald Trump’s Missteps Risk Putting a Ceiling Over His Support in Swing States."

I singled that one paragraph out because it's different from everything else in the article, which I read because I wondered what evidence the author — Patrick Healy — had for the (hedged) proposition in the headline. I was imagining an alternative article that could have been written premised on the idea that Trump is choosing the best path for himself, that it's worrying Clinton people, and that they hope to enlist the media in an effort to lure/scare Trump into doing something else — toning down his attacks, being less exciting, ruining the ratings-based relationship he's got with television. 

Lake Mendota, today. [Althouse]

IMG_1228

IMG_1227

Talk about anything you want in the comments.

"Brendan Dassey, who was convicted along with his uncle, Steven Avery, in the murder of Teresa Halbach, had that conviction overturned Friday..." [Althouse]

"... by a federal magistrate judge in Milwaukee."

The shocking ruling, in a case made famous in the Netflix series "Making A Murderer," could result in Dassey getting a new trial or being freed from prison. It gives prosecutors 90 days to decide whether to retry Dassey, although an appeal could extend the proceedings....

"These repeated false promises, when considered in conjunction with all relevant factors, most especially Dassey’s age, intellectual deficits, and the absence of a supportive adult, rendered Dassey’s confession involuntary under the Fifth and Fourteenth amendments," [wrote U.S. Magistrate Judge William Duffin].
Much more at the link, which goes to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

"Libtard" is a portmanteau word, but of what? Liberal + ??? [Althouse]

This topic arose in the comments to my post last night that took The New Yorker to task for publishing the sentence: "In India, Hindu supremacists have adopted Rush Limbaugh’s favorite epithet 'libtard' to channel righteous fury against liberal and secular élites." In fact, Rush Limbaugh never says "libtard."

I added: "'Libtard' is an offensive word, unnecessarily dragging in disrespect for the mentally challenged." I have always heard the word as a combination of "liberal" and "retard." But in the comments, MadisonMan asked: "Does the 'tard' come from retard, or bastard?" I think it's obvious: 1. "Retard" is often shortened to just "'tard" and no one ever says "'tard" to mean "bastard," and 2. The contempt expressed in the use of the word seems to be about stupidity and not orneriness.

Urban Dictionary confirms my understanding, in the top-voted definition and in all the competing definitions.

But here's an op-ed in the NYT (from 2014), "Testing the Ideas of India." See? It's India again.

The [the right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party's] dominance during this election campaign has had unexpected benefits, including reviving the belief that secularism is a value — even if it’s a value that needs reviving, and redefining. In rambunctious Twitter arguments, “sickular” is often used as a pejorative term, along with “libtard,” a composite for “liberal bastard.” This language, however extreme, is a sign that between the small but noisy groups of Hindu supremacists and the small but equally vociferous groups of committed left-liberals lies a vast middle ground.
I don't know if that columnist got it right, and who knows how the word "libtard" came into being in India? It didn't come from Rush Limbaugh, but did it come from other Americans? If so, was the "tard" misunderstood as connected to "bastard" or was the NYT op-ed writer — Nilanjana S. Roy — just innocent of the American word "tard" and making her own assumption? Roy is a novelist born, educated, and living in India. She's not a good source of the origin of the American epithet "libtard," which seems to have a life of its own in India.
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Distribution Release: OpenMandriva Lx 3.0 [DistroWatch.com: News]

Kate Lebedeff has announced the launch of OpenMandriva Lx 3.0. The new version features the Calamares system installer, improved boot times and has been compiled using the Clang/LLVM compiler. "OpenMandriva Lx is a cutting edge distribution compiled with LLVM/clang. Combined with the high level of optimization used for....

Development Release: FreeBSD 11.0-RC1 [DistroWatch.com: News]

The first release candidate for the upcoming FreeBSD 11.0 is ready for testing: "The first RC build of the 11.0-RELEASE release cycle is now available. A summary of changes since BETA4 includes: a NULL pointer dereference in IPSEC has been fixed; support for SSH protocol 1 has been....

Are You Pondering What I’m Pondering? [hogewash]

I think so, Brain … but wouldn’t that take several gallons of wart remover?


Thanks for the Links [hogewash]

A significant number of page views here at Hogewash! come from outside links. I’d like to thank those sites that have sent viewers this way during the past week. In addition to hits from search engines, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Facebook, Hogewash! has had visitors linked from:

Allergic to Bull
Saber Point
Dave Alexander & Company
EBL
Helm’s Deep
The Other McCain
Patterico’s Pontifications
Bob’s Blog
Thinking Man’s Zombie
BillySez

Thanks, fellow bloggers, for those links, and thank you to everyone who clicked on them.


The Pleiades in IR [hogewash]

Pleiades_WISEThis false-color image shows the  Pleiades cluster of stars as seen through the eyes of WISE, the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer. It’s a mosaic of several hundred images from the more than one million WISE captured in its first survey of the entire sky in infrared light.

All four infrared detectors aboard WISE were used to make this mosaic. Blue and cyan represent infrared light at wavelengths of 3.4 and 4.6 µm, which is dominated by light from stars. Green and red represent light at 12 and 22 µm, which is mostly light from warm dust.

Image Credit: NASA


Logins [hogewash]

2016 AUG 13 04:06:26 UTC Home Page
2016 AUG 13 04:31:01 UTC Home Page


Are You Pondering What I’m Pondering? [hogewash]

I think so, Brain … but iodine stains my fur.


Team Kimberlin Post of the Day [hogewash]

Here’s yet another example of how the pressure of too many LOLsuits and lawsuits is taking their toll on The Dread Pro-Se Kimberlin. The Gentle Reader may remember that TDPK served a copy of this on me around the first of the month.

On Thursday, I received a second copy in the mail with the date of service “corrected” to 9 August. It’s almost as if he can’t keep up with what he’s served.

I don’t plan to have any public comment on this other than the reply I will file with the court—except to note that everything is proceeding as I have foreseen.


Quote of the Day [hogewash]

Ce que nous connaissons est peu de chose, ce que nous ignorons est immense. What we know is not much. What we do not know is immense.

—Pierre-Simon Laplace


Login [hogewash]

2016 AUG 11 05:47:10 UTC Home Page

UPDATE—2016 AUG 11 10:12:15 UTC Home Page
2016 AUG 11 10:14:03 UTC Home Page

UPDATE 2—2016 AUG 11 11:23:13 UTC Home Page
2016 AUG 11 12:22:11 UTC Home Page

UPDATE 3—2016 AUG 11 15:30:42 UTC Home Page

UPDATE 4—2016 AUG 11 19:55:00 UTC Home Page
2016 AUG 11 19:55:43 UTC 2015/01

UPDATE 5—2016 AUG 11 20:53:22 UTC search=who+would+do+such+a+thing
2016 AUG 11 20:54:17 UTC Home Page


Rio Recap: Day Seven [Hot Air » Top Picks]

MWhew! A week into the Olympics and the U.S. is still crushing things and has a comfortable lead in the medal standings. Here’s what happened on Friday:

Star of the day: Kim Rhode, USA, Shooting

Kim Rhode became the first female Olympian to medal in an event for six straight Olympics and the first Summer Olympian to accomplish this feat. She earned the bronze medal in skeet shooting. Rhode previously won gold in the 1996 and 2004 games and bronze in 2000 in double trap, silver in 2008 in skeet, and gold in 2012 in skeet.

 

Also shining brightly: Anthony Ervin, USA, Swimming


Anthony Ervin was the 2000 Olympic champion in the 50m freestyle–and last night he managed to regain his title by out-touching Florent Manaudou of France and fellow American Nathan Adrian. Ervin, at age 35, is now the oldest individual gold medalist in men’s swimming. Ervin also won gold in the 4×100 freestyle relay.

Mighty Maya: Maya DiRado fully expected to be working for McKinsey & Company and living in Atlanta by this point. Instead, she won four Olympic medals in Rio. Last night, DiRado added to her medal haul in a huge upset victory in the 200m backstroke, and she couldn’t believe it when she saw that she had won gold. Well done.

Ledecky does it again: Katie Ledecky may in fact be part fish. She won the 800m freestyle yesterday in convincing fashion, smashing her own world record and finishing so far ahead of her competitors that they weren’t even in the frame on TV. Ledecky is going to leave Rio with four golds and one silver. Not bad for a 19-year-old.

The “Shot Diva” earns her crown: Michelle Carter, who tweets using the handle @ShotDiva, won the first-ever shot put gold by an American woman yesterday. She defeated New Zealand’s Valerie Adams on her final throw. Her father, NFL player Michael Carter, was the 1984 Olympic silver medalist in shot put.

Phelps and Le Clos reconcile, tie: The world was abuzz over #PhelpsFace when Michael Phelps stared down Chad Le Clos before the 200m butterfly. Yesterday, they were part of a three-way tie for silver in the 100m butterfly, and Phelps no longer looked like he wanted to eat Le Clos alive. Phelps will take to the pool for one last time in Rio tonight in the 4×100 medley relay.

Hope Solo causes controversy: For the first time since 2000, the gold medal in Olympic women’s soccer will not go to Team USA. Yesterday, the United States was defeated in penalty kicks by Sweden. After the match, Hope Solo’s comments calling the Swedish side “cowards” caused quite a bit of controversy and accusations of poor sportsmanship. She will not be punished and later said that she was “really bad” at losing.

Irish brothers go viral for interview antics: The O’Donovan brothers may have come in second in the double sculls competition (and won Ireland’s first-ever medal in rowing), but their hilarious interviews make them number one in my heart.

Trump: The only way Clinton can win Pennsylvania is by cheating [Hot Air » Top Picks]

He’s down 10 points in the last four polls of a state the GOP hasn’t won in nearly 30 years. As such, this is only slightly less absurd than Hillary saying that cheating is the only way she can lose South Carolina.

Although, if the polls keep going the way they’re going, by November cheating really might be the only way she could lose South Carolina.

“The only way we can lose in my opinion — I really mean this, Pennsylvania — is if cheating goes on,” Trump told rally attendees Friday evening during an event in Altoona. “I really believe it.”…

“We have to call up law enforcement, and we have to have the sheriffs and the police chiefs and everybody watching,” Trump said. “Because if we get cheated out of this election, if we get cheated out of a win in Pennsylvania, which is such a vital state, especially when I know what’s happening here, folks. I know. She can’t beat what’s happening here.”…

“The only way they can beat it in my opinion — and I mean this 100 percent — if in certain sections of the state, they cheat, okay?” he said. “So I hope you people can sort of — not just vote on the 8th — go around and look and watch other polling places and make sure that it’s 100 percent fine.”

By “certain sections of the state,” I assume he means black sections of Philadelphia. His friend Hannity has been beating the drum lately about the implausible fact that in 59 separate inner-city precincts of Philly, Mitt Romney received not a single vote in 2012. A Philly elections inspector pushed back hard against that criticism this week on Twitter, though, insisting that there’s no evidence of voter fraud. He also made the clever point that if you were going to rig vote totals, it’d be idiotic to hang a zero on your opponent for the simple reason that it’s too easily disproved. Any single Republican voter in that precinct could come forward after the election and say that they’d voted for Romney, thereby proving that the totals are bogus. No one did. The Philadelphia Inquirer went looking for registered Republicans in black inner-city districts afterward and found only handfuls, and none of those whom they did find claimed to have voted for Romney. Getting a flat zero in a city precinct does seem unlikely but it also seems unlikely that one party would dominate an entire racial demographic on the order of 95/5 — and yet Democrats do reach numbers in that vicinity among blacks. Add in the fact that the first black president was on the ballot in 2012 and Romney was a rich white older guy from the business class and you can imagine how some very, very Democratic black precincts might vote in lockstep.

The larger point, though, is that in a state as big as Pennsylvania, where 5.6 million ballots were cast four years ago, the difference in a 10-point race is upwards of 250,000 votes. Democrats would need to engineer voter fraud on a massive scale to duplicate that advantage. And voter fraud later wouldn’t explain the consistent blowout margins that the pollsters are seeing right now. How are four different polls being “rigged” to show Clinton pulling away?

Maybe the “Pennsylvania’s gonna cheat” talking point is better understood less as a bona fide argument than a pure coping mechanism:

Advisers who once hoped a Pygmalion-like transformation would refashion a crudely effective political showman into a plausible American president now increasingly concede that Mr. Trump may be beyond coaching. He has ignored their pleas and counsel as his poll numbers have dropped, boasting to friends about the size of his crowds and maintaining that he can read surveys better than the professionals.

In private, Mr. Trump’s mood is often sullen and erratic, his associates say. He veers from barking at members of his staff to grumbling about how he was better off following his own instincts during the primaries and suggesting he should not have heeded their calls for change…

Sitting with [Karl] Rove in the Manhattan apartment of a mutual friend, the casino magnate Steve Wynn, Mr. Trump said [in May] he would compete in states like Oregon, which has not voted Republican since Ronald Reagan’s 1984 landslide. Mr. Rove later told people he believed Mr. Trump was confused and scared in anticipation of the general election, according to people who have heard Mr. Rove’s account.

A few weeks later, when Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey brokered a meeting at Trump Tower between Mr. Trump and governors from around the country, Mr. Trump offered a desultory performance, bragging about his poll numbers, listening passively as the governors talked about their states and then sending them on their way.

That same NYT story claims that, at two meetings with top donors last month, Trump spent most of the time going around the room asking whom he should tap for VP instead of reassuring them about his campaign strategy or policy platform. He’s spending today, by the way, in … Connecticut, with a rally scheduled tonight in Fairfield. Only once in the last five presidential elections has the Republican nominee come within 17 points of winning Connecticut. That was in 2004, when sitting president George W. Bush, amid a national victory fueled by support for the war on terror, got crushed there by 10. My theory for why Trump’s bothering to campaign there is that he simply wanted to be home this weekend and chose to justify it with a trip to a neighboring state. But maybe, per what he said to Rove about Oregon, he’s never really abandoned the idea that he’s going to compete in all 50 states, no matter how absurd that seems given the current state of battleground polls. Supposedly he wanted the RNC to open 50 state offices for him. If he’s convinced himself that every state is in play because his rallies are huge, why not take a day to go up to Fairfield and lock down Connecticut?

In lieu of an exit question, an interesting theory from Nate Silver:

The more strongly he and the Hannitys of conservative media emphasize that the election will be rigged, the less reason any Trump supporter has to participate in it. Drew McCoy speculates that Trump might start to wind down his own participation, remaining in the race but cutting back his events to one or two a week eventually. That would be an extra way for him and his fans to spin a blowout — not only was the election “rigged,” they can claim, but because it was so obvious so early that it was rigged, they decided to boycott en masse. He would have won Pennsylvania, but between the cheating and the ensuing boycott, he ended up losing by 15. It’s not his fault. It never is.

FBI could release Hillary Clinton’s interview notes [Hot Air » Top Picks]

When he testified before Congress last month, FBI Director James Comey was asked by Republicans to turn over the official notes on Hillary Clinton’s FBI interview. Comey replied he would, “commit to giving you everything I can possibly give you under the law and to doing it as quickly as possible.” Now a month later, Politico’s Josh Gerstein reports a disagreement is taking place behind the scenes over what to release and when:

Comey and the FBI are pressing to send at least some of the requested information to the Hill soon, but others in government have stepped in to question such a move, officials tracking the debate said.

If you had to make one guess which agency or department was stepping in to delay the release of the information, which one would it be? If you said the State Department, you’d be correct:

“The State Department has cooperated — and will continue to cooperate — with the FBI every step of the way. We support and understand the FBI’s desire to provide information to Congress. Any suggestion to the contrary is false,” State Department Director of Press Relations Elizabeth Trudeau said in a statement.

“The State Department has asked the FBI that we be kept apprised of information to be provided to Congress that contains sensitive information related to State Department equities and for an opportunity to review it. Such an opportunity for review is in keeping with the standard interagency review process when dealing with another agency’s documents or equities,” Trudeau added.

The State Department isn’t saying the FBI can’t release the material it’s just demanding a chance to review all of it first. And overseeing this conflict, at least to some degree, is the Department of Justice:

“I’m sure this is causing a lot of consternation at main Justice,” said Anne Weismann, a former Justice Department official now with the non-profit Campaign for Accountability.

It’s probably also causing a lot of consternation inside the Clinton campaign. It all depends on what is in those reports. Clinton has claimed repeatedly that she told the FBI exactly what she has told the American people. Is that true or will the FBI agents’ notes (no video or audio recording was made) show Clinton gave a different account to the feds? Obviously, if she did give a different account, it’s the sort of thing Republicans in Congress would be eager to highlight before the election. Clinton’s legal troubled involving the email server are over but her political troubles could still get worse.

Can the states legally ban “gay conversion” therapy? [Hot Air » Top Picks]

Some pastors in Illinois are challenging a state law which bans gay conversion therapy on a variety of grounds. You can’t have a lawsuit which touches on the muddled set of topics included here without trigger a storm, so we can expect some fireworks and protests to surround it all the way through. (WaPo)

A group of Illinois pastors filed suit against the state Thursday alleging clergy — because it violates their constitutional right to free speech and exercise of religion — should be exempt from a law banning counselors from trying to change a minor’s sexual orientation.

The law, which went into effect in January, bans licensed counselors and mental health professionals from practicing “conversion therapy” — counseling designed to make gay, lesbian, bisexual or queer people become straight — on minors. While religious leaders don’t fall under this category, the suit says pastors could be held liable for consumer fraud under a section of the law that says “no person or entity” may advertise or practice conversion therapy that “represents homosexuality as a mental disease, disorder or illness.”

I almost feel sorry for the court that has to hear this case because the question before them is such a hot mess in terms of the legalities, not to mention the social issues. I think when the law was originally passed, legislators were under the impression that they were in the clear on the religious freedom front by excluding church leaders from prosecution. But the suit raises a bizarre question as to whether or not they could still be taken down on the grounds of consumer protection in terms of offering a fraudulent service.

Seriously? I suppose if there’s some church which is literally charging by the hour for these “services” as opposed to providing counseling to the flock there might be an issue to haggle over but that sounds awfully unlikely. Do many churches regularly engage in by-the-hour billing for therapy in the same fashion as a psychologist? If so, I’m unaware of it.

The larger question here is whether or not anyone should be able to offer such “conversion therapy” even outside of a church setting. Personally (and I say this from a layman’s perspective with no experience in that field of medicine), I find such efforts to be pointless from a medical perspective because I don’t think being gay is an attribute that you can just change. Part of me thinks that it almost has to be genetic given the ever increasing body of science in genetics and how much we’ve been learning about the way our genes program things into our distinct personalities. But by the same token, I used to frequently wonder how a genetic trait which would seem to be designed to prevent procreation could survive over the long evolutionary haul. As I said… that question is way out of my depth.

But what about people who really want to change, despite any potential medical evidence to the contrary? People work toward changes in themselves all the time and frequently seek out either professional or clerical help to do so. Maybe you’re having trouble quitting smoking or losing weight. Perhaps you’re too shy and want to be more outgoing. Afraid of flying? See a therapist. Yes, you could argue that some of those things are “choices” and being gay isn’t, but others are “choices” we never actually made. (See the fear of flying or just being shy.) But now we’re talking about things which tend to be classified as disorders in their extreme forms and we’re back to the issue of labeling homosexuality as a medical disorder.

See what I mean about the lawsuit being a hot mess?

To finish up by getting back to the case at hand, I think the pastors will need to be able to show actual damages to establish their standing to challenge the law in the first place. Thus far it sounds like they’re dealing in hypotheticals. Until someone comes in and successfully sues one of them for breach of contract for failing to “cure” their gayness, this one may hit the rocks pretty quickly.

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Hacker publishes cell phone numbers of hundreds of House Dems [Hot Air » Top Picks]

Guccifer 2.0 has been quiet for a couple weeks but Friday he posted a file containing the personal cell phone numbers and email addresses of Democrats in congress. From the Smoking Gun:

In a post to his WordPress blog, the vandal–who previously provided nearly 20,000 Democratic National Committee e-mails to Wikileaks–uploaded an Excel file that includes the cell phone numbers and private e-mail addresses of nearly every Democratic member of the House of Representatives.

The Excel file also includes similar contact information for hundreds of congressional staff members (chiefs of staff, press secretaries, legislative directors, schedulers) and campaign personnel.

Guccifer 2.0 claims the information was taken in the hack of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and, according to the NY Times, claims the bulk of the DCCC material will be released by WikiLeaks:

“It’s time for new revelations now,” the hacker wrote in posting the files. “All of you may have heard about the DCCC hack. As you see I wasn’t wasting my time! It was even easier than in the case of the DNC breach.”

On Friday night, Guccifer indicated that more leaks would follow, writing on Twitter that he planned to send “the major trove” of the House committee documents to WikiLeaks. “Keep following,” the hacker wrote.

Guccifer 2.0 is supposedly the name of a Romanian hacker, one who claims he was behind the DNC hack. In fact, Guccifer 2.0 is likely a Russian propaganda front intended to create doubt about responsibility for the hack. Earlier this week WikiLeaks began playing into an online conspiracy theory that claims a DNC staffer murdered in Washington D.C. was the source of the leaked information (rather than Russia).

NFL won’t allow Cowboys to wear decals honoring fallen police officers [Hot Air » Top Picks]

Today the Dallas Cowboys take the field for the beginning of the 2016 pre-season, with questions still swirling around the participation of QB Tony Romo. Normally, as a Jets fan, I wouldn’t pay too much attention to America’s Team, but there are some off the field controversies as well. During their training camps, the Cowboys have been sporting decals on their helmets which pay tribute to the fallen Dallas Police Officers who were murdered during an ambush earlier this year. Their stated intention had been to wear them throughout the season, but now the NFL front office has weighed in and squashed the idea. (Fox News)

The NFL denied the Dallas Cowboys’ request to wear a decal on their helmets during the season that would have paid tribute to the five police officers killed last month in an ambush.

The team had been wearing a decal with the words “Arm in Arm” since the first day of training camp this summer. Dallas police Chief David Brown and Mayor Mike Rawlings paid the team a visit on that day, according to Fox 4 News.

The NFL’s strict rules on uniforms forced the league to deny the Cowboys’ request to wear the decal for the upcoming season.

The Cowboys’ management is being rather sanguine about it, saying that the decals and the attention they brought to the issue already served the desired purpose, but not everyone is satisfied. The Dallas Fallen Officer Foundation responded by saying they were hurt by the decision and the knowledge that the league wasn’t fully supporting them.

It’s true that the league has some very strict rules regarding uniforms and they tightly guard their public appearance… most of the time. When the Chicago Bears’ Brandon Marshall wore orange shoes in a game against the Lions he was fined $10,500. (An amount he earned back on the first play of the game.) But when particular tributes and honors are suggested – or enforced – the league frequently takes a different route. In October they routinely plaster pink over uniforms and equipment in support of breast cancer awareness to the point where I get sick of seeing it. How is the cause of supporting our nation’s police officers less important?

Still, the pink leggings and other devices are all decisions which come from the league office and they apply to all the teams, not just one. With that in mind, while it still annoys me no end, I can see where the league has an argument to make in terms of not allowing a single team to begin customizing their gear beyond the normal team colors. Now if only we can get them to get rid of those throwback uniforms which look simply horrendous.

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Turkey’s Erdogan clearly warming to Putin as a role model [Hot Air » Top Picks]

I previously noted with considerable alarm the fact that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan seemed to be establishing some new alliances of convenience following the recent, failed coup, and that one of those was with Russia. Erdogan’s first “official” meeting with Vladimir Putin came at an odd time, only weeks after the two nations appeared to be on the brink of war – or at least an international incident – when the Turks shot down one of Vlad’s planes in the ongoing Syrian struggle. But now, with a new philosophy of cracking down on his own people in effect and condemnation rising from western allies, Erdogan needs new friends and he seems to have found one in the Russian strongman.

At the Washington Post, Anne Applebaum analyzes the budding bromance unfolding before our eyes and sees similar cause for worry.

Dictators who fear their enemies also look for allies. But they don’t want allies who will criticize what they are doing, either out loud or by example. And so, in the wake of the failed coup and the successful crackdown, Erdogan naturally sought out the company of Vladimir Putin, the Russian president. In St. Petersburg this week, the settings at a luncheon for the two men included porcelain plates decorated with their portraits.

At least until now, Putin’s model of suppression has differed from Erdogan’s strategy. Instead of mass arrests, he has used targeted violence. To intimidate journalists, he ensures that one is occasionally murdered; to scare oligarchs, he locked up one of them for a decade. He controls the economy through a system of cronyism and kickbacks on a breathtaking scale.

But like Erdogan, Putin needs company. Both men share a paranoid fear of the enemies they can’t see.

Ah, they had porcelain plates made with both of their likenesses on them. Isn’t that adorable? One assumes that the representation “levels the playing field” and portrays them eye to eye. That would require a bit of photoshopping at the outset because Erdogan is a literal giant who towers over Vlad.

Sadly, this isn’t a joking matter. Applebaum makes some excellent points about the rapid evolution of Erdogan as a dictatorial strongman and how the differences between he and Putin could be quickly washed away. Thus far we’re not being allowed to see any of the blood and gore which is almost certainly underpinning the purge of the Turkish president’s “enemies” in his own country. They’re simply disappearing by the thousands. The visible effects are the suppression of religion and the free press and the public displays of forced enthusiasm from his subjects. But if unhappy Turks are too vocal in their opposition to this new way of life and the press isn’t complacent enough, Erdogan will almost certainly be taking pages from Vlad’s playbook. The occasional murdered journalist paired with a few “community leaders” who wind up in dank, dark cells for years on end can be very effective in quelling disgruntled voices.

Turkey may be a lost cause at this point, at least for the immediate future. It’s one of the worst spots to collapse into tyranny in terms of the best interests of the west and counter-terrorism efforts, but our options appear to be quite limited. If the Turkish people don’t want to fall under the spell of a tyrant, they’ll need to remove him themselves. And as the recent failed coup showed us, that won’t be an easy feat at all.

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Congrats. You just paid $40M to run monkeys to death on treadmills in Texas [Hot Air » Top Picks]

Let’s kick the weekend off with a story which touches on two subjects which tend to get the blood boiling: potential animal abuse and massive, wasteful spending of tax dollars by the federal government. The two subjects may not sound like probable candidates to intersect in American politics very often, but a story out of Texas could prove to be the exception to the rule. The Texas Biomedical Research Center proudly announced this month that they’d bagged another impressive haul of federal grant money to the tune of $40M. The cash is ostensibly to be used for “nonhuman primate” research into various human medical maladies. Nothing too unusual so far I suppose.

The Southwest National Primate Research Center (SNPRC) at Texas Biomedical Research Institute (Texas Biomed) was awarded more than $40 million for a National Institutes of Health P51 grant through 2021 to continue research programs using nonhuman primates (NHP) as part of the National Primate Research Center (NPRC) consortia. This five-year grant from the NIH’s Office of Research Infrastructure Programs is the fourth renewal of the Center grant that provides funds to SNPRC to continue operation of its facility with nearly 3,000 nonhuman primates and continue its research in aging, regenerative medicine, experimental physiology and genomics and infectious diseases.

Beneath all the clinical discussion taking place in the announcement are some troubling details. First of all, dropping $40M in taxpayer money on any one facility in a single year is a major investment and it had best be paying off in solid benefits. It also needs to be closely tracked to ensure that the taxpayer is getting their money’s worth.

Then there’s the question of what’s being done with all of these “nonhuman primates” at the facility. Any testing on primates is worrisome to begin with. I realize that there are a few cases in medicine where it simply can’t be avoided, but our history of using chimps, monkeys and the rest of the primates in research is a spotty one at best. These animals are all extremely intelligent with demonstrated emotional capacity and the cruelty they’ve been subjected to at times is horrifying.

Senator Jeff Flake has been tracking stories of abuse in both forms in his Wastebook and the Texas facility was already on his radar. As Flake noted in his book, this is a combination of some very ethically dubious animal testing combined with massive infusions of taxpayer dollars. (Emphasis added)

Each of the twelve little monkeys was put into a “transparent rodent exercise ball.” The balls of monkeys were then placed onto a standard human NordicTrak treadmill. The treadmill was started at a low speed and gradually increased to 1 mile per hour. The monkeys did acclimate to running in the exercise ball on the treadmill, but not without some spills and mishaps along the way. One vomited in his exercise ball and three others “defecated in their exercise ball.” Another monkey “in the treadmill running group died during week 11 of the study, for reasons not related to the study,” according to the researchers…

“The Southwest National Primate Research Center, located in Texas, received $8 million from NIH in 2015 for the grant that financed the 12 little monkeys running on a treadmill study. Over the past decade, the facility has collected nearly $70 million in grants and contracts from various federal agencies. During this same period, the center has also been slapped with fines totaling more than $30,000 by the federal government for a number of violations, including performing a necropsy on a baboon that was still alive. USDA identified 14 violations of the Animal Welfare Act at the center over a two year period.

There’s something going on at this center which clearly merits further investigation. The fact that they’ve been hit with tens of thousands of dollars in fines already and are still getting paydays in the tens of millions should be setting off some alarm bells. And since the work is being done with such a massive infusion of your tax dollars, we have every right to know the details. If we can’t get a private animal welfare or good government group into the facility to check things out there should be some congressional intervention. If not, this sounds like one situation where the taxpayers could be saved a lot of money by shutting off the spigot from Uncle Sam.

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Reince Priebus introduces Trump: Hey, the LA Times daily tracking poll still shows a tight race [Hot Air » Top Picks]

An exclamation point on two days’ worth of rumors about the RNC threatening to cut Trump off, with an “emergency meeting” happening today between Team Reince and Team Trump to help get his campaign back on track. I hope Trump fans appreciate Reince’s performance here. It’s aimed squarely at them, to reassure them that the RNC is fully behind its nominee. You guys will still vote Republican in 2018 if Trump loses by eight points and then spends two years insisting Priebus stabbed him in the back, won’t you?

Why Reince felt obliged to mention the polls as part of his shpiel, I don’t know. He’s duty bound to be enthusiastic as part of his pep talk, but he could have sidestepped the subject with the ol’ chestnut that the only poll that matters is on Election Day. As it is, he’s right that the LA Times poll shows a tight race, with Clinton up one point. What he doesn’t mention is that it’s the only national poll tracked by RCP that does.

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There are a few other things he doesn’t mention. For starters, the LAT poll has always tilted unusually heavily towards Trump. In mid-July, at a moment when the RCP poll average had Clinton ahead by four points, the LAT had Trump up three. At one point after the Republican convention, Trump surged to a seven-point lead in the Times poll. He surged in other national polls too, but the biggest bounce he got anywhere else was a three-point lead. And of course his seven-point margin has now been completely erased by Clinton’s post-convention bounce. FiveThirtyEight sees a “house effect” in the LA Times poll worth fully five points to Trump, meaning that a one-point lead for Hillary there suggests an actual lead nationally of six. And of course, even a six-point national deficit doesn’t capture the deep trouble Trump is having in battleground states now. In Pennsylvania, he’s been down 10-11 points in four straight polls. The new survey of North Carolina has him trailing there by nine. A lone national poll that’s tight means next to nothing when the weight of battleground polls is heavily against him, and of course Reince knows it. But when you’re stuck introducing your nominee at a rally, even a thin silver lining will have to do.

One other note about the LA Times poll, since we’ll probably hear it cited a lot in the weeks to come as a hopeful outlier from the other national surveys. Its methodology is unusual in that, instead of polling a bunch of different Americans each time, it uses a fixed group of the same 3,000 people and re-polls a subset of them every day. The idea is to capture shifts in opinion among a set population to detect which way the general public might be shifting. It worked well in predicting the 2012 outcome, but the problem with using a fixed group is that if there’s a “lean” towards either candidate among that group, it’s going to show up every time you poll them. If instead you’re using a sample of different Americans each time you conduct a survey, then you might get a “lean” towards one candidate in one poll but it won’t necessarily show up in the next one you do. That might help explain why the LA Times data is durably pro-Trump. As to why there might be a lean, Nate Cohn notes that the LA Times weights its sample according to how people claim they voted in 2012, with a roughly accurate split of 27 percent for Obama and 25 percent for Romney. The flaw in doing things that way, though, is that some people in every poll reliably misstate whom they voted for in the last election. Inevitably some small but meaningful chunk insists that they backed the guy who won the election even though, in reality, they voted for the loser. When you account for that, Cohn estimates, a more accurate sample for the LA Times poll would be something like 33 percent who claim they voted for Obama versus 25 percent who claim they voted for Romney. The fact that the Times’s sample is far more evenly balanced suggests that it skews too heavily Republican. Which is exactly what the data showing a “tight race” supports.

Anyway. Here’s Reince being a good soldier. followed by recent video of Sharon Day suggesting that the election might be rigged. Sharon Day is co-chair of the RNC.

Blaming Obama and Clinton for ISIS simplifies a complicated problem [Hot Air » Top Picks]

Donald Trump is sticking with his claims President Barack Obama founded ISIS. AP has a pretty detailed look at Trump’s comments (and the hypocrisy of it), but the biggest issue is Trump’s simplifying a complicated problem. Obama and Hillary Clinton certainly helped bring about ISIS with their reckless war in Libya, quasi-supporting the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, and their moves in Iraq and Syria. But if Trump is going to link Obama to ISIS, then he’ll have to link every U.S. president dating back to World War II to the group too.

The U.S. has been involved in the Middle East and Africa for over seven decades, starting with the North African Campaign of World War II. The cleansing of the Axis powers from the area (plus Britain and the Soviet Union’s brief war with Iran) left a massive power vacuum in the region which the Allies had to fill or enhance their presence. The Middle East was already in flux due to the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, but Britain’s decision to almost completely leave the area made things difficult (note: I’m not saying they shouldn’t have left, just pointing out the problem). The region became even more chaotic when the U.S. and United Kingdom decided to overthrow the Iranian government in 1953 to make sure the Shah stayed in power. It may have ensured Iran’s support during most of the Cold War, but helped foment anti-American sentiment in Iran.

It’s also important to remember the Baghdad Pact of 1955 (otherwise known as the Central Treaty Organization) which was an agreement between Britain and most of the Middle East (with U.S. support) to keep the Soviet Union away from area. Iraq got out of the agreement following the establishment of the republican government in 1958 (and also became allied with USSR), while Egypt was considered pro-Russia and anti-U.S. CENTO eventually fell apart in 1979 when the Shah was deposed in Iran, which also pretty much destroyed Iran’s relationship with the West. CENTO may have been a good idea, but its execution didn’t work because of the Cold War. It’s possible things could have gone differently if neither the West or the USSR decided to exert influence in the region, but that’s only more speculation.

The proxy war between USSR and America kept things tense in the region when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan. The country was already in revolt, but Russians leaders were apparently unsure of the stability of the pro-Soviet government, so they tried to take over, which led to the U.S. funding of the Mujahedin. Former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski said in 1997 just how expansive the operation was.

” And the second course of action led to my going to Pakistan a month or so after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, for the purpose of coordinating with the Pakistanis a joint response, the purpose of which would be to make the Soviets bleed for as much and as long as is possible; and we engaged in that effort in a collaborative sense with the Saudis, the Egyptians, the British, the Chinese, and we started providing weapons to the Mujaheddin, from various sources again – for example, some Soviet arms from the Egyptians and the Chinese. We even got Soviet arms from the Czechoslovak communist government, since it was obviously susceptible to material incentives; and at some point we started buying arms for the Mujaheddin from the Soviet army in Afghanistan, because that army was increasingly corrupt.”

The U.S. involvement in Afghanistan is pretty important because of its role in helping establish Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network. It’s possible bin Laden wouldn’t have become a threat if the U.S. hadn’t decided to fund anti-Soviet fighters in Afghanistan. There’s a cause and effect here, which U.S. diplomats didn’t see because of the real worry about the Soviets. I’m not saying the U.S. should have let Russia run roughshod over Afghanistan, but there’s no guarantee it would have succeeded because of the 1978 revolt against the pro-Soviet government.

Then there’s Iraq, and the U.S. involvement there. It’s possible the massive chaos of the last four decades could have been avoided if the U.S. didn’t support Saddam Hussein during the Iraq-Iran War (which led to a massive debt Hussein couldn’t pay back to the West, which could have led to the Kuwait invasion). It’s also possible Iraq and the West should have stayed at the negotiation table following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait or that Hussein should have been completely removed from power in 1991 (there’s no reason to start a war if you don’t plan on winning and destroying your enemy). Maybe the U.S. should have declared war on Iraq during Bill Clinton’s administration because of Hussein’s antics with UN inspectors and the worry of weapons of mass destruction. Or maybe the U.S. should have avoided doing sanctions in Iraq after the First Gulf War and tried to show how free trade can benefit everyone. It’s completely possible small businesses would have set up shop in Iraq (if they’d wanted) to sell items like fruit or other goods, and U.S. businesses could have expanded their own footprint. This would mean more people would have had jobs, tax revenue would have grown, and Hussein could have payed off the debt. It also could mean the 2003 Iraqi War could have been avoided, which means the humongous power vacuum left by Hussein’s downfall (and the Shia/Sunni tensions afterward) wouldn’t have happened. But hindsight is 20/20.

The point of all this is it’s way too simple to just lay the creation of ISIS at the feet of Obama and Hillary Clinton. The U.S. has had a long history of involvement in the region, meaning there are various opinions on how America is viewed. The U.S.’ foreign policy decisions have more than likely helped create the chaos inside the “cradle of civilization,” and have done nothing to stabilize it. This doesn’t mean apology tours should happen, but the solution is letting U.S. companies trade with foreign companies and individuals (without tariffs) to encourage free markets all over. It’s not going to be 100% successful (because we’re all human), but if fully baked and half-baked military action isn’t working, why not try something different?

Ohio Judge: State legislators cannot defund Planned Parenthood [Hot Air » Top Picks]

An interesting decision out of Ohio. A judge appointed by George W. Bush has ruled that Ohio’s law defunding Planned Parenthood is unconstitutional because it violates the group’s First Amendment rights. From the Associated Press:

The Ohio law targets the more than $1.4 million in funding that Planned Parenthood gets through the state’s health department. That money, mostly from the federal government, supports certain education and prevention programs. The law would bar such funds from going to entities that perform or promote abortions…

The state’s attorneys had argued that Planned Parenthood was trying to override state policy choices and that no entity has a constitutional right to receive public money…

More specifically, the state is arguing that it has a policy preference for childbirth over abortion and the allocation of funds is based on that choice. However:

[Planned Parenthood’s] attorneys argued the law was unconstitutional because it required, as a condition of receiving government funds, that recipients abandon their constitutionally protected rights to free speech and to provide abortion services.

The wrinkle in this case is that it’s already illegal for Planned Parenthood to spend any money it receives from the state on abortion. The question is whether the state can limit the group from receiving funds for other health services because the group also provides abortions.

The more basic question seems to be whether money is fungible, i.e. once you give $1.4 million to Planned Parenthood that money is part of a pool, some of which is used to provide abortions (often in the same clinic where the publicly funded health services take place). The judge in this case is rejecting that idea and saying government money can’t be restricted based on where the rest of the group’s money is going.

Ohio’s attorney general has already said he plans to appeal the decision.

Political correctness and the decline of science [Hot Air » Top Picks]

Here’s quick pop quiz for you… which US political party is “The Party of Science” today? I’d be willing to bet that nearly everyone had an answer at the ready and half of you disagreed with the other half. (Assuming a readership which matches the generic national political profile.) Rather than the usual finger pointing, perhaps this is an opportunity to ask ourselves if politics is simply ruining science. And if so, that’s a disastrous shame because we used to be really good at science in the United States.

Alex Berezow at the American Council on Science and Health has a great essay for your Friday reading on precisely this subject. Rather then getting bogged down on who is right and who is wrong on political debate stages – particularly on climate change – he focuses on how much we may be poisoning the well of learning through political maneuvering.

[Nathan Cofnas of the journal Foundations of Science] begins the paper with the story of Socrates, who was executed for “corrupting the youth” of Greece. Forebodingly, he adds, “[T]he philosophy of his prosecutors — that morality-threatening scientific investigation should be prohibited — flourishes even today.”

To support his case, Mr. Cofnas focuses on the taboo subject of group differences in intelligence, which he says is suppressed by those who believe that even discussing the topic is “morally wrong or morally dangerous.”

Those who embrace such a viewpoint obviously do so with the honorable intention of preventing discrimination. However, the proverbial road to hell is paved with good intentions. Such misguided efforts to maintain perfect equality can hamper the advancement of knowledge…

Not only do intellectuals refuse to abandon politically correct beliefs in the face of contradictory evidence, but simply questioning them can ruin a person’s career. Lawrence Summers’ tenure as president of Harvard was cut short because he suggested that there are intellectual differences between men and women. As a result of such punitive pushback, some researchers are afraid to investigate differences between male and female brains, which certainly exist. Without a doubt, this reticence is holding back the field of neuroscience.

The discussion of whether or not there are differences between the brains of men and women (spoiler alert: there are) is nearly as toxic as attempting to study any possible differences between racial groups. Even asking a question can begin an ideological war and end your career. By shutting off the flow of research and frank scientific debate we arrive at all sorts of dead ends which range from the hilarious to the disastrous. We now have large segments of society where people apparently feel that DNA research is all hokum and your X and Y chromosomes are irrelevant. When does human life begin? Don’t ask that one unless you’re ready for a fight. Why is there so much methane in the atmosphere and is it “too much” for the planet? (We actually know the answer to the first part of that one, but if you ask half the politicians in Washington you’d think it was a mystery on par with the question of alien life in the universe.)

Do you really want to argue whether or not politics is impacting science at this stage of the game? Just look around. How long have people been smoking marijuana now… thousands of years? Yet if you ask not only politicians, but scientists, you’ll find muddled answers and looks of confusion when you ask about its potential medical benefits. Don’t you suppose we should have figured that out by now? Are eggs good for you or not? That one depends on which year you ask the question.

If you manage to find something without much political value we’re making new advances all the time. Did you know that some sharks live to be 400 years old and they’re pretty much entirely immune to cancer? Seems like we could learn something useful from them if we applied our efforts, and there are actually some woefully underfunded scientists working on precisely those questions.

So yes, we should challenge everything when it comes to science. Heck, I’m still pretty sure that Neil Tyson is full of it and there’s no such thing as dark matter. It’s just a mathematical dodge to cover the fact that we really don’t know how gravity works. But I could be totally wrong! We won’t know unless we do the research, leave the politics out of it and keep on slugging away until we get reliable results. And in cases where the scientists are divided on immensely complex questions we can have fun debating it all day long, but let’s keep on digging and admit that we don’t have all the answers yet. That’s the heart of the scientific method and we should probably get back to our roots on that score.

EdwinHubble

*Common Sense Economics* [Marginal REVOLUTION]

The third edition is now out, and the authors are James D. Gwartney, Richard L. Stroup, Dwight R. Lee, Tawni H. Ferrarini, and Joseph P. Calhoun.

Self-recommending, this is a very good introduction to economics for say a smart high school student who reads books.  Sadly, more and more politicians and indeed professional Ph.d. economists need this wisdom too.

The post *Common Sense Economics* appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Does inefficient risk-bearing change the opportunity cost of government borrowing? [Marginal REVOLUTION]

Let’s say the private sector is using a hurdle rate of five percent and the government a rate of one percent.  (Those numbers are illustrative only.)

Furthermore say the private sector uses five percent because it faces private risk which is in fact not social risk from a welfarist point of view.  In other words, the private sector ought to use a one percent hurdle rate, even though it does not, but people worry about their own portfolios rather than the broader social portfolio of projects in toto.  If the private sector switched to the one percent rate, of course, it would invest much more and lower the marginal rate of return on capital from five percent down to one percent, adjusting for all the required adjustments (taxes, transactions costs, etc.).

In such a world, if a new government project displaced private capital, the opportunity cost would be one percent at the margin.

But we are not in such a world, even if you think we ought to be.  If a new government project displaces some private sector capital, the marginal cost there is still five percent.

You can read Brad DeLong’s take on my post yesterday on the opportunity cost of extra government projects.  Brad longs for that cross-sector equalization down to one percent on both sides of the ledger and he makes many fine points.  But there is nothing in his argument which rebuts, or even tries to rebut, the claim that, given current imperfections the marginal opportunity cost is still five percent.

So the message of my original post stands as well, and you will note that is simply the mainstream micro take on this question which has been around since the 1970s, with the commonly understood answers pretty much crystallized by the early 1980s.

Addendum: Here is me, from the comments: “It is amazing how much “free lunch” economics one can read in these comments. Of course we should in fact apply multiplier analysis to the percentage of previously unemployed resources targeted by the new project, and a higher hurdle rate to the rest. You can argue over what is the percentage mix here, but please don’t pretend scarcity is no longer a ruling economic principle.”

The post Does inefficient risk-bearing change the opportunity cost of government borrowing? appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Xenophon paragraphs to ponder [Marginal REVOLUTION]

Australia’s government needs to scrap its “free trade Taliban mentality”, buy more local products and properly scrutinise foreign investment, says Nick Xenophon, the leader of one of the minor parties that holds considerable sway following last month’s election.

Most of all, it hurts that he is called Xenophon; some of you will know that Xenophon from ancient Greece was the first (surviving) author to point out the phenomenon of division of labor.

Apparently there is a “Great Xenophon stagnation” or even retrogression.  This passage notwithstanding, the Taliban, by the way, did not favor free trade.

Here is the full FT piece by Jamie Smythe.

The post Xenophon paragraphs to ponder appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

The culture and polity that is Singapore, Germany, and Belarus [Marginal REVOLUTION]

Singapore leads the way, offering three-quarters of a million U.S. dollars to gold-medal winners, followed by Indonesia ($383,000), Azerbaijan ($255,000), Kazakhstan ($230,000) and Italy ($185,000).

I would say Italy should not be on that list, as they have some fiscal troubles, plus plenty of other sources of national pride.  And there is this:

…other countries offer alternative bait — like military exemptions (South Korea), a lifetime supply of beer (Germany) and unlimited sausages (Belarus).

Here is the article, via James Crabtree.

The post The culture and polity that is Singapore, Germany, and Belarus appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

Meet Fuchsia, a new operating system in the works at Google [PCWorld]

For years, Google has developed two operating systems side-by-side in Android for mobile devices and Chrome OS for laptops and desktops. But it looks as though Google now has a third operating system project underway known as Fuchsia. 

Although Google isn't revealing much, Android Police dug into the documentation for the project on GitHub and discovered more details about the OS. The biggest takeaway, Android Police notes, is that Fuchsia's kernel, known as Magenta, is designed to work across a wide range of devices—from small "embedded devices" all the way up to desktops and laptops. 

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Guccifer 2.0 takes credit for hacking another Democratic committee [PCWorld]

The hacker who claims to have breached the Democratic National Committee’s computers is now taking credit for hacking confidential files from a related campaign group.

Guccifer 2.0 alleged on Friday that he also attacked the servers of the Democractic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC). He posted some of the purported files on his blog, and is promising journalists "exclusive materials" if they contact him directly.

Although Guccifer 2.0 claims to be a lone hacktivist, some security experts believe he's actually a persona created by Russian government hackers who want to influence the U.S. presidential election.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Will Trumpism survive a Trump defeat? [Power LinePower Line]

(Paul Mirengoff)

Jonathan Tobin takes up the question at Commentary. He defines Trumpism as “isolationism, protectionism, and populist blood and soil nativism.”

Tobin answers his question this way:

Though Trumpism without Trump would be a very different and less potent movement, it is a mistake to think even a landslide defeat for the Republicans will guarantee that it can resume its past stance as a supporter of a strong America on the global stage as well as support for free trade.

Tobin is silent on the matter of “populist blood and soil nativism.”

He adds:

If [the GOP] is to resume being the party of Reagan, it will require more than just a Clinton win. It will need a resurgence of support for conservative principles as well as some soul-searching on the part of those Republicans leaders who failed to unite to stop Trump before he sank their party.

Before discussing the future of “isolationism, protectionism, and nativism” in the GOP, I have two comments on the second quoted passage. First, it should not be the goal of Republicans to resume being the party of Reagan in any strict sense. By the time of the next election, Reagan’s presidency will be more than 30 years in the rear view mirror. The challenges America faces now are, in important respects, different from the challenges it faced in the 1980s.

The goal of Republicans should be to find the right answers to these problems. Though hardly irrelevant to that quest, Reaganism is an insufficient guide in many cases.

Second, although soul-searching by Republicans leaders is warranted, it is not the kind that Tobin seems to have in mind. Rather, the soul-searching should focus on the attitudes and pronouncements that opened the door for Trump.

Above all, Reince Priebus and company should reflect on the fact that their successful efforts to dissuade conservative presidential contenders from taking a strong stand against amnesty and citizenship for illegal immigrants enabled Trump to move to fore as the only contender willing to blast such policies.

When Trump said during debate after debate that the contenders wouldn’t be discussing illegal immigration if not for him, he was not far from the truth. But if Republican leaders hadn’t tried to move the GOP away from a hard line on illegal immigration, it’s likely that a number of contenders would have taken a hard line and made it a theme before Trump entered the race.

Now, what of the post-Trump GOP (assuming the tycoon loses and the election isn’t close). It’s not likely to be isolationist. Events overseas will probably see to that.

In light of events, Trump himself isn’t taking a consistent isolationist stance. He does show an alarming affinity for Vladimir Putin (and, in doing so, for strengthening Assad’s position), but this view seems unique to Trump. I don’t expect the GOP to become a pro-Putin party.

Nor do I expect the GOP to become a protectionist party. What seems likely is that party will become less dogmatically pro free trade. This means analyzing, or purporting to analyze, trade deals on their merits to make sure, as will be said, that America isn’t being taken advantage of.

In other words, I see the GOP straddling the issue, just as I think Hillary Clinton will. If Clinton makes a deal that can readily be attacked as disadvantageous in its particulars, and if the economy is struggling, Republicans will likely attack the deal.

But given the strength of the Sanders wing of the Democratic party, Clinton isn’t likely to agree to a controversial trade deal in these circumstances. So protectionism probably won’t be a major issue for a while. One never knows, but it is unlikely to fuel a serious Trumpist candidacy in 2020.

On immigration, which Tobin may have mostly in mind when he discusses “nativism,” much depends on Speaker Paul Ryan. If he cooperates with the Democrats to pass amnesty-style legislation, then the door once against will be open to Trumpism because party leaders will have committed the same mistake, only more egregiously, that gave rise to Trump.

If Republicans take the “enforcement first” position that prevailed (barely) during the George W. Bush years, then the door will not be open for a successful “populist blood and soil nativist” presidential campaign. However, even in the absence of one, Republican pundits who support amnesty and high levels of legal immigration might well continue to characterize Republicans who disagree with them as nativist (with or without adjectives).

A Trump defeat wouldn’t restore the Republican party to its 2013 posture, nor should it. But if GOP leaders avoid the mistakes they began making back then, the party should be able to move past Trumpism.

How the GOP feeds the PC beast [Power LinePower Line]

(Scott Johnson)

John Fund reports that congressional Republicans increased the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights with a very generous budget increase last year. Fund takes up the matter in the NR column “How Republicans feed the beast of political correctness.”

OCR is perhaps the most left-wing office in the federal bureaucracy. Bankrolling it that way Congress did was an egregious error (for which they were rewarded with the transgender guidance). This would be understandable if Congress were in the hands of the Democratic Party. As Republicans rule the roost, however, this seriously discredits congressional Republicans.

Fund puts it this way: “If Republicans in Congress wonder why so many conservatives are frustrated with them, here is one reason: GOP lawmakers generously fund the Obama administration’s most out-of-control elements while slapping down the conservatives who try to warn them away from such misjudgments.”

Who raised the red flag in this case? Fund notes that Civil Rights Commissioners Peter Kirsanow and Gail Heriot wrote a letter last year to Appropriations Committee chairmen warning them against giving OCR a huge budget increase. They protested the budget increase as a bad, bad idea.

The Appropriations Committee chairmen not only approved they OCR budget increase, however, they also slapped Kirsanow and Heriot down by including a line in the Commission’s budget commanding us not to send them letters on Commission letterhead.

Kirsanow and Heriot had committed the ancient offense of lèse majesté. Forgive them, your highnesses.

This year the Senate bill again gives OCR a raise. Even worse, Kirsanow and Heriot remain unforgiven. The Senate bill requires the Staff Director of the Civil Rights Commission to report any violations of the ban on the use of letterhead by individual commissioners.

Note well: whenever Peter and Gail write on letterhead, the letter always begins with the sentence, “We write as two members of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and not on behalf of the Commission as a whole.” As Fund observes, only an illiterate could fail to understand that.

House Republicans may have learned something. I understand that House Republicans are trying to take back last year’s 7 percent budget increase. Fund notes that the latest budget increase being proposed by the GOP Senate is “only” 3 percent. I would say that’s at least 3 percent too much.

Don’t just sit there, do something. Please let your Republican Senators and congressman (if you have one) know what you think.

The Week in Pictures: Suction Cup Edition [Power LinePower Line]

(Steven Hayward)

Forget the Olympics. The dude climbing Trump Tower with suction cups was the sports highlight of the week, hands down. I’m amazed it isn’t being proposed as a new Olympic sport. Meanwhile, one of the candidates had another terrible week. Lied about things; said stupid stuff to reporters. Yeah, that’s right—it was the one who fancies pantsuits. The media hardly seemed to notice. This week’s gallery, by the way, achieves one of our standards, with both a Star Trek and a Star Wars reference. Life is good in mid-August.

Cruz Trump Climber copy Climb Emails copy

Clinton Trek copy Hillary delete copy Hillary's Man copy Hillary cigars copy Hillary Shorts again copy Hillary's snail economy copy Crime Families copy Hillary shorts out copy Hillary Robes copy

Hillary Wages copy

Make Canada easy copy Med Pot copy Obama Iran 2 copy Obama Negotiates 2 copy Trump v. Liar copy What Trump Meant copy Ttrump v Hillary copy Dictator Garb copy

Trump Bar copy

Apecutrm Chart copy

Freethinker copy

Real Communism copy

Guitar Gun copy

How to clear customs in Blue States.

Rebel Bass copy Sarcasm copy Dog Beers copy Small Wine copy Vegan Lifespans copy Whipped Cream copy Laughing Gas copy

Meetings People copy Sharknado copy

Glockatchu copy

Wishing Pie copy

Venn copy

And finally. . .

GunGirl11 copy

Report: Clinton Foundation under federal investigation after all [Power LinePower Line]

(Paul Mirengoff)

A few days ago, CNN reported that the FBI asked to investigate the Clinton Foundation earlier this year, but the Department of Justice said it did not have enough evidence to open a formal probe. I wrote about this report here.

But now, the Daily Caller is saying that several investigations of the Clinton Foundation have been launched, including one led by U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara of the Civil Frauds Unit that will focus on Clinton Foundation in New York. The Daily Caller’s Richard Pollock identifies his source as “a former senior law enforcement official.”

According to Pollock’s report, Bharara’s investigatation will be supported by various U.S. Attorneys Offices. This, he says, is a major departure from other centralized FBI investigations.

As I suggested in my post about DOJ’s reported refusal to authorize an investigation earlier in the year, much has been
learned
since. Thus, whatever validity DOJ’s view about the evidence against Clinton Foundation may have had then (and I don’t think it had any), there is good reason to revisit the matter now.

What are the practical consequences of the Clinton Foundation being under investigation now, assuming that it is? It strikes me that the investigation, which almost certainly involves complicated transactions, isn’t likely to be completed before Election Day. Nor, even if it is, will the DOJ likely reach a decision to prosecute before then.

Once Clinton is inaugurated in January (assuming she wins), her Justice Department isn’t at all likely to charge her Foundation with criminal conduct. In the old days, an independent counsel might well have been appointed and given responsibility over the matter. But I don’t see that happening now, especially in a Hillary Clinton administration given the Clintons’ experience with Ken Starr.

There’s a period of more than two months between Election Day and Inauguration Day. But even if investigators were able to wrap things up during this period, I’d be shocked if the Justice Department brought charges against the president-elect or her Foundation.

I say this even though Bharara has a reputation, seemingly well earned, as a fearless prosecutor. It’s one thing fearlessly to investigate and/or prosecute powerful local and state officials. It’s another to prosecute the U.S. president.

Readers will probably recall hearing about James Comey’s well earned reputation for fearlessness and straight shooting. In the end, he declined to pursue a case against Hillary that would have been firmly rooted in the facts (as Comey presented them) and the statutory language.

Anyway, Bharara can’t prosecute the Clinton Foundation without DOJ approval. It seems unrealistic to imagine he could get it.

AP Reporter Volunteers as Witness For Hillary [Power LinePower Line]

(John Hinderaker)

Over the last several election cycles, the liberal media has progressively emerged from the closet, supporting its candidates (i.e., Democrats) more and more openly. This year, with open declarations of war on Donald Trump by the New York Times, the Associated Press and others, all pretense of neutrality has been set aside.

The latest instance, a truly extraordinary one, comes from Associated Press reporter Lisa Lerer, who, in an AP news story, volunteered as a witness for the proposition that Hillary Clinton is not too sick or too feeble to be president. The story starts with this video, which some have interpreted as depicting Mrs. Clinton having a seizure. It obviously shows no such thing; Hillary acts goofy, but she doesn’t have a seizure. Ms. Lerer is one of the reporters that you see in the video:

This incident is being cited by some as part of a broader concern about Hillary Clinton’s health. That concern is entirely legitimate. She has refused to release her medical records, but we know that she suffered a severe concussion that required her to take months off from her duties as Secretary of State, and, according to her closest aides, left her “often confused.” Recently photos have emerged of Hillary being helped up a short flight of steps, and being held upright as she addresses a crowd. Then there is the fact that she often disappears, sometimes for days at a time. Where is she? Why isn’t she campaigning? No one knows. Concerns about whether Hillary’s health is strong enough to serve a term as president are certainly well-founded.

The Associated Press wants to head off those concerns, lest Donald Trump become president, so it turned its reporter loose to defend Hillary:

[V]ideo of my surprised facial expression has become Exhibit A in the latest unfounded speculation about Hillary Clinton.

As an Associated Press reporter who’s spent more than a year covering her candidacy, I was there for her appearance. After she ordered herself a “cold chai,” my colleagues and I shouted some questions, mostly about Clinton’s recent meeting with Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

Perhaps eager to avoid answering or maybe just taken aback by our volume, Clinton responded with an exaggerated motion, shaking her head vigorously for a few seconds. Video of the moment shows me holding out my recorder in front of her, laughing and stepping back in surprise. …

Two months later, that innocuous exchange has become the fodder for one of some Trump supporters’ most popular conspiracy theories: her failing health.

Screen Shot 2016-08-12 at 7.15.49 PM

Note how the AP reporter delegitimizes any questions about Hillary’s health as “conspiracy theories.”

Where I saw evasiveness, they see seizures.

The AP reporter next gives her own medical opinion as to Hillary’s fitness to serve:

Much of such speculation about the state of Clinton’s health stems from a concussion she sustained in December 2012 after fainting, an episode her doctor has attributed to a stomach virus and dehydration. During the course of her treatment, she was found to have a blood clot in a vein in the space between the brain and the skull behind the right ear.

To recover, Clinton spent a few days in New York-Presbyterian Hospital and took a month-long absence from the State Department for treatment.

Republican strategist Karl Rove later called it a “serious health episode” that would be an issue if Clinton ran for president, fueling a theory the concussion posed a graver threat to her abilities than Clinton and her team let on.

A July 2015 letter released by Clinton’s campaign proclaimed her in “excellent physical condition and fit to serve as president of the United States,” according to Dr. Lisa Bardack, an internist and chairman of the Department of Medicine at the Mount Kisco Medical Group in New York.

Which means, I take it, that there is no need to see Ms. Clinton’s actual medical records. If Ms. Lerer were a real reporter, rather than a Democratic Party operative running interference for her candidate, she would want to see those records for herself, and have them evaluated by an independent neurologist.

Lerer concludes her vouching for Mrs. Clinton with an attack on Sean Hannity, one of the many who have asked questions about Hillary’s health:

Hannity repeatedly played the muffin shop footage, describing what Clinton was doing as “this sort of twitching thing that she does in front of reporters that was really bad” and then as “a violent, violent, repetitive jerking of the head.”

Seemingly as “proof” that something was amiss with Clinton, Hannity exclaimed: “Watch the reporter, like, pull back as she — the reporter got scared. And she keeps doing it. What is that?”

Fox News never contacted me to ask that question. For the record, I wasn’t scared for a moment.

Can I get a witness? Well, sure–from the press corps! For media bias, we have never seen anything like the present presidential campaign.

Is There a Justice Gender Gap? [Guido Fawkes]

MP Philip Davies has given a speech on ‘The Justice Gender Gap’ which has resulted in Jeremy Corbyn calling for him to have the Tory whip withdrawn. It is 45 minutes long and quotes a lot of facts and figures to make his case. Judge for yourself…

The post Is There a Justice Gender Gap? appeared first on Guido Fawkes.

Unison Backs Corbyn [Guido Fawkes]

corbyn

Unison has nominated Jeremy Corbyn for leader with 58% of the votes cast. That represents less than 1% of Unison’s total membership but Jezza’s campaign team are heartened that every region backed their man. Also worth giving yesterday’s much-vaunted GMB result backing Owen Smith some context. The GMB claims 631,000 members, but the low turnout means just 4.1% of those have declared in favour of Oily, compared to 2.8% backing Jez, so it was hardly the breakthrough Smith supporters were suggesting. Corbyn-backing Unite didn’t ballot their members but they did consult their policy conference of 1,000 or so rank and file members. He’s also backed by the Communication Workers Union, TSSA, ASLEF and the Bakers Union. Corbyn cleaned up with union affiliated last time…

The post Unison Backs Corbyn appeared first on Guido Fawkes.

Canonical Releases Snapcraft 2.14 for Ubuntu with New Rust Plugin, Improvements [Full Circle Magazine]

Coming hot on the heels of Snapcraft 2.13, the new 2.14 maintenance update is here to introduce a bunch of new plugins, namely rust, godeps, and dump. You can find more information about each one by running the “snapcraft help ” command in a terminal window.
Also new in the Snapcraft 2.14 release is support for alternate relocation mechanisms in the “make” plugin (for example, you can use DESTDIR alternatives), as well as many improvements to the “go” plugin, such as support for local sources, which are now preferred instead of fetching new ones, and proper handling of the source entry.
The list of improvements implemented in Snapcraft 2.14 continues with support for building a kernel Snaps for multiple hardware architectures using a single snapcraft.yaml file, support for “oneshot” daemons, better wiki parser source management, as well as proper setting of “shebangs” and support for requirement files in the “python” plugin.

Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/canonical-releases-snapcraft-2-14-for-ubuntu-with-new-rust-plugin-improvements-507229.shtml
Submitted by: Arnfried Walbrecht

ExLight Linux Is Now Based on Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS and Debian GNU/Linux 8.5 [Full Circle Magazine]

ExLight Linux Build 160810 is here to rebase the entire OS to the recently released Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS (Xenial Xerus) operating system, as well as to upgrade the default desktop environment to Enlightenment 0.20.99.0 from 0.19.12 and move to a kernel from the Linux 4.6 series, specially optimized by Arne Exton to support more hardware.
Probably the most exciting new feature of the ExLight Linux Build 160810 release is the replacement of kernel 4.6.2-exlight with kernel 4.6.0-10-exlight, which appears to be based on the upstream Linux 4.6.5 kernel, the latest version available at the moment of the announcement for the new ExLight version (Linux kernel 4.6.6 is now the latest).
Other than that, the new ExLight Linux build comes with a 64-bit ISO-hybrid image that users can write on either USB flash drives or DVD discs, support for running the entire operating system directly from RAM by using the “Copy to RAM” option from the boot menu, and a fully functional Ubiquity graphical installer.

Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/exlight-linux-is-now-based-on-ubuntu-16-04-1-lts-and-debian-gnu-linux-8-5-507230.shtml
Submitted by: Arnfried Walbrecht

Battle of the Boys and Election 2016 [Maetenloch]

Since the we're now in the general election season it's time to check in with the boys and see who they're endorsing for president in 2016.

Clock Boy: Not Trump
While he hasn't explicitly endorsed any candidate, his comments and those of his dad make it clear that Trump is a no-go for multiple reasons. And they've been hanging out with Democrats in DC recently so expect a Hillary endorsement at some point.



Balloon Boy: Trump
B-Boy has always been a bit of a wildcard so it shouldn't be surprising that he'd go for the wildcard candidate. And by wildcard I really mean attention whore.



Bat Boy: ?? Trump?
Sadly Bat Boy hasn't been active politically since 2008 when he endorsed McCain then switched over to Obama. His whereabouts and current activities are unknown but assuming that he's even aware of the election in his cave hideout, I have a feeling that he'd go for Trump. Just a hunch on my part though.



And then there's the real bellwether of the election: space alien.

Space alien: Probably Hillary
Space alien is bit hard to peg and he hasn't been active in politics in recent years either but his endorsement/prediction record going back to Reagan in 1980 has been 100%. He supported Clinton both times, then GW Bush, and then Obama. He hasn't said anything to date but based on his long personal history with the Clintons I'm guessing he's on Team Hillary.




The Red Letter Media Star Wars Reviews Outtakes And My Belated Force Awakens Review [Extended Dance Cut Edition] [Maetenloch]

So earlier this year I re-watched the Red Letter Media Mr. Plinkett Star Wars reviews of Episode I, Episode II, and Episode III and enjoyed them yet again. This might be the first case where the video reviews of a movie series are actually more entertaining and re-watchable than the actual movies.

Anyway the occasion was that Mrs. Maetenloch had announced that she wanted to go see The Force Awakens in the theater based on the positive reviews of it from her friends and coworkers.

[Now to put this in context you have to understand that she had never seen any of the Star Wars movies before in her life and was perfectly content in this state. To suddenly want to go see this kind of movie was....uncharacteristic. Now by cultural osmosis she did have a vague idea of the SW story - the Darth robot guy was bad, the Yoda was good, there were spaceships and laser swords, but after that it got real fuzzy real quick. I had tried to get her to watch the original one years before but it was late and I think she was already asleep before the droids got captured by the jawas.]

"Sure!" I said, "but to really understand and appreciate it you should watch the original trilogy first." She agreed and so over the next two weekends we ended up re-watching the original movies. She liked the original one even though it wasn't her usual cup of tea. But she really enjoyed TESB and got into the characters at that point. She also liked ROTJ (I had warned her about the stupid ewok crap beforehand).

So having brought her up to speed to circa 1983 we finally went off to see The Force Awakens in the theater.

And long story short I thought it was enjoyable despite all the Mary Sue-ism, some unexplained plot details, and other little annoyances. Mainly I was just relieved that it didn't suck. But she really liked it. For her it was a continuation of the original series except with a 33 year fast forward - seeing the older Han and Leia was like seeing old friends from the previous weekend again. Anyway she was jazzed about it and the coming sequel, and finally asked the question I knew was coming: Hey why don't we watch the prequels now?

No, I mansplained. You really don't want to - you'll just be disappointed. Because they suck. There's nothing to be learned from them - except as a cautionary tale. Are they really that bad, she asked. Yes, I answered, and frustratingly so because they didn't have to be. Here let this YouTube video explain. I think she got the point about 15 minutes into Plinkett and has never asked about them again.

So...all this is to explain how it is that I came upon these outtakes from the Plinkett reviews. Yeah they're a bit old but they're entertaining in their own right and it looks like the RLM guys had almost as much fun making the reviews as we had from watching them. It's also a reminder of how much you can do with modern equipment and a low budget but a lot of creativity.

Star Wars: Episode II Review Outtakes



Episode III Behind the Scenes


Behind the Scenes – Star Wars: Episode III Review Teaser Trailer


Episode 1 Review Interview Outtakes


"Paradox, paradigm, parallax --- it's like poetry... It rhymes."

Some Classic ONTs [Maetenloch]

With so many ONTs posted over the years it's easy to lose track of them and have a hard time finding them again. Especially since they all had basically the same title. :-) So I thought would gather up links to some of the more memorable ONTs in one place before they are lost to time.

If you have any ones that you think should be added, please suggest them in the comments or via email.

Oh and as I was gathering this list I showed a couple of these to Mrs. Maetenloch who I don't think has ever actually read a single ONT in all years I ever did them. Her comment was that hey maybe she should start reading more of them.

The Yokopalooza ONT

The Long Cat ONT

The QR Code ONT and it's Hidden ONT

The Who Goes Nazi ONT

The Cecil the Lion ONT

The Meet the Bow-F*cker ONT

The Tin Can ONT

A Sooper Sekrit ONT

The Lady Be Good ONT - an early one.

The Redneck Ninja ONT - another early one

The Infamous Memorial Day ONT - this actually was a genghis ONT when we were sharing duties

Random ONT 1

Random ONT 2

Random ONT 3

Random ONT 4

The DOOM ONTs
The backstory on these is that I had gotten tired of some commenters and I think maybe even Ace himself constantly posting gloomy, despairing comments in every thread. So I decided to go with the trend and show everyone what real DOOM threads looks like.

DOOM ONT - Day 1

DOOM ONT - Day 2

DOOM ONT - Day 3

DOOM ONT - Day 4

Update:

Random ONT 5

One of the All Picture ONTs - suck it Buzzfeed.

A Flamewar ONT - an early one. Gawd genghis loved these. Today they're known as 'Trump threads'.

Your suggestions here...

The belated ‘Still Star-Crossed’ TV trailer. [Moe Lane]

So I figure that this is going to be the show that all of my fellow SCAdians will be obsessing over later this year:

Sequel to Romeo and Juliet (based on the Young Adult book by Melinda Taub), and they’re promising blood, intrigue, and betrayal.  Mind you, it’ll be on network, so there’s gonna be some hard limits, there.  Be interesting if it takes off.

Moe Lane

PS: Personally, I hope that they answer the fairly obvious question raised in the trailer by not answering it at all.  I can think of at least two new time travel shows coming out this season that will be marred by obvious attempts to Say Something Serious About Racism; I’m all for the producers just stonefacing their way through the issue and keep distracting the audience with blood, intrigue, and betrayal. Again, within the restrictions of network TV…

RIP, Kenny Baker. [Moe Lane]

This is a shame. This guy was an integral part of my childhood, not that I ever knew his face. Rest in peace, Kenny Baker.

…Yeah, sorry, got caught up in Fallout New Vegas’ Old World Blues. [Moe Lane]

It’s a really, really, really messed up DLC.  I’m enjoying the heck out of it, but it’s also teaching me that my per-level skill choices started out bad and stayed that way for a while.  Fixing it has been… energetic.

Update on my Washingcon BubbleGUMSHOE con game playtest. [Moe Lane]

It’s definitely still going to happen – hopefully – but the abrupt truncation of my house-to-myself holiday required me to prioritize what needed doing, and ‘prepping for a game’ took second fiddle to ‘putting the kids’ new desk, chairs, and table together.’ I will be contacting the folks who volunteered for the playtest early next week; I plan to have at least the framework for the adventure by then.  Also, I expect that a portion of said playtest will involve a rough-and-ready generation of a cheat-sheet for new players.

This is the tentative blurb for the Washingcon game:

Danger-Prone Dani and the Dossier of Madness

Teen sleuths Dani Balasco and her Mystery Club have one prized possession: the collected casebook of their adventures in Torrance Cove. But somebody’s stolen the book from them! Why?

This family-friendly, relaxed adventure uses Evil Hat’s BubbleGUMSHOE teen sleuth RPG rules, and is designed for three to five players. Pre-generated characters and streamlined rules for play will be provided; experienced players welcome, but not required. If you’ve always wanted to be in your own Scooby-Doo episode, you will hopefully enjoy this game.

‘Kylo Ren reacts to Rogue One Trailer 2.’ [Moe Lane]

Got sent this via email, and I gotta say: it’s spot-on, in its way.  Particularly the ending.  The terrifyingly possible ending that I had not yet considered before watching this, and now my heart is full of fear.

Watch it, and you will understand.

RIP Kenny Baker [The Jawa Report]

star-wars-episode-iv-a-new-hope-limited-edition-20060804064909633-000.jpg

Hat Tip: Old Ben.


See the thing is Kenny may be gone, but droids never die.

L.A. Times Buries Relevant Fact in “Cops Kill Young Minority Child” Story [Patterico's Pontifications]

This comes via Jack Dunphy on Twitter, who notes:

Try reading the headline and 12 paragraphs out loud, as I did last night to my wife. As you do it, emphasize the parts of the story that make this a real tear-jerker about a young minority kiddo killed by those evil authority figures:

Vigil held for 14-year-old boy shot and killed by LAPD: ‘Justice for Jesse’

Te vigil Wednesday night for Jesse Romero, the 14-year-old boy shot and killed the day before by Los Angeles police, was not silent.

When it began, the crowd of more than 70 people stood in a large circle. In the center, a group of Aztec dancers yelled and blew a conch, performing to the rhythm of a drum that echoed loudly throughout Mariachi Plaza in Boyle Heights.

Using a bullhorn, organizer Carolyn Vera, 25, addressed the crowd: “As a community here in Boyle Heights, we’re here to denounce LAPD’s killing of Jesse Romero, in case they can’t hear us!”

In an empty lot not far away, a small group of officers stood outside their patrol cars, keeping watch.

At the vigil, men, women and children stood side-by-side, holding votive candles and signs that read, “El pueblo unido for Jesse (The people united for Jesse).”

Another stated, “No más madres en luto (No more mothers in mourning).”

The chanting focused on the slain boy, who died just a few weeks shy of his 15th birthday: “Justice for Jesse.”

But there were quieter moments: a moment of silence and the reading of a poem about the 1968 student massacre in the Tlatelolco zone of Mexico City, Mexico. Both sought to honor the dead students, Romero and anyone else killed by authorities in the U.S. and other countries.

Among those attending the vigil was 28-year-old Etujan Lopez of East Los Angeles, who said he had mixed feelings about the shooting.

“I hear different stories about what happened,” he said. “I think it’s a failure on everyone’s part.”

Lopez said there should be more community programs that help steer children away from gang activities and encourage them to get an education and professional careers.

And here comes the 12th paragraph. Can we get a drumroll, maestro? Go ahead and actually play the nine-second video, just for the drama:

And here it is:

According to the LAPD, Romero was suspected of writing gang-style graffiti in the area before leading officers on a foot chase and firing a gun at them late Tuesday afternoon.

The chase ended when Romero was fatally shot by officers at Breed Street and Cesar E. Chavez Avenue. A handgun was recovered at the scene, police said.

Indeed, there is not a shred of evidence in the story that anything happened except this: a gangster kid tagged a building, led police on a chase, and fired at them, ensuring his own demise. The End.

We’re lucky we’re not sitting through yet another funeral of a police officer killed for doing his job this weekend.

But we have to sit through endless paragraphs about a 14-year-old child — killed by “authorities” just as so many others have been “massacred” — and how the people want “justice” for him because too many moms are in mourning.

And somehow, the writer manages to convey the message: this kid was executed. There’s not a speck of evidence offered to support it. But that’s what they want you to think.

I’ll leave you with the end of the story:

Standing quietly, 17-year-old Julian Montenegro said he came out with his parents to support the Boyle Heights community that he lives in. He said he is bothered by the shooting.

“It’s really awful,” he said. “It instills fear in people of color.”

Not far, Lopez stood silently. His eyes were watery.

“I’m in tears right now,” he said, his hands on his waist. “With tragedy things might change.”

He paused, looking at the crowd.

“Hopefully they’ll change.”

Hopefully! Yes: hopefully gangsters will stop firing at cops. But until such time as it does, “justice” for people like Jesse Romero is going to look a lot like, well . . . the justice that Jesse Romero got.

I’ve got no problem with that.

Newspaper’s Epic Fail at Social Justice [Patterico's Pontifications]

[guest post by JVW]

Sorry I haven’t been heard ’round these parts recently. I have been on vacation for the past several days and am just starting to wind it down. Here is your latest progressive newspaper social justice fail, courtesy of the Olympics.

Simone Manuel of the United States Olympic Swimming Team pulled off an upset win in the women’s 100 meter freestyle on Thursday night, defeating a tough field which included Australia’s Cate Campbell, the current world record holder; Cate’s sister Bronte Campbell who had won the event at last year’s world championships; Ranomi Kromowidjojo of the Netherlands, the 2012 Olympic gold medalist in the event; and Sarah Sjostrom of Sweden, who had won the 100 meter butterfly and finished second in the 200 meter free earlier in the competition. Manuel finished in a dead heat with Penny Oleksiak of Canada and thus tied for the gold, and became the first American woman to win the event since 1984 and the first Yank to win it in a non-boycotted games since 1972.

Manuel, who is set to begin her junior year at Stanford this coming fall, also happens to be the first African-American woman to win a gold medal in an individual swimming event at the Olympics, so naturally in this day and age that distinction became the big story to our race-obsessed media. The New York Times, ESPN, and NBC all made her race front-and-center in their coverage of her remarkable achievement, with the Washington Post trotting out the requisite academic/journalist to bloviate on how the history of segregation at swimming pools has allegedly stymied generations of black Mark Spitzes and Katie Ladeckys. In today’s America — Barack Obama’s America — we can no longer focus on the outstanding accomplishment of one of our fellow citizens without running it through the noxious lens of racial grievance-mongering.

But taking the gold in the social justice olympics was the San Jose Mercury News, famous on the race-hustling scene for promoting the overwrought and probably phony story that the CIA had sponsored the crack cocaine epidemic in urban American in order to raise money for the Contras in Nicaragua. Immediately after the race, the newspaper published the following headline on their website and then tweeted it out:

Mercury-News

Sure, it could be the case that a racially-insensitive headline writer is responsible for this mess, perhaps someone who is so bored with the diktats of social justice that he or she just defaulted to the racial aspect in the headline. But if I had to bet, I would guess that it is far more likely that a racially-hypersensitive headline writer, whose views of social justice were shaped by a college journalism program and the reigning groupthink of the newsroom, saw nothing wrong with promoting the race angle as the attention grabber to the story. To the modern social justice warrior, everything is focused on racial/ethnic/gender identity, so why wouldn’t ze or zir subsume the person of Simone Manuel in favor of the identity of African-American?

Alas and alack, that appeared to be a bridge too far for the more conventional progressivism of the Mercury newsroom, sort of like being in favor of gay marriage in 2004 was. The newspaper immediately apologized for the “offensive” (to whom, one is left to wonder) headline which was rewritten to focus on Manuel’s local connection with Stanford instead of her heritage. Perhaps in a day or two we will be treated to the counter-reaction in which the Mercury is lambasted for downplaying the significance of race in the story. It’s always fun to watch the earnest progressives tread lightly in the grievance minefield.

Tonight Simone Manuel goes for a second individual gold in the 50 meter freestyle and then later she hopes to anchor Team USA to gold in the 400 meter medley relay. Go Simone. Go USA.

– JVW

Russ Allbery: git-pbuilder 1.42 [Planet Debian]

A minor update to my glue script for building software with pdebuild and git-buildpackage. (Yes, still needs to get rewritten in Python.)

This release stops using the old backport location for oldstable builds since oldstable is now wheezy, which merged the backports archive into the regular archive location. The old location is still there for squeeze just in case anyone needs it.

It also adds a new environment variable, GIT_PBUILDER_PDEBUILDOPTIONS, that can be used to pass options directly to pdebuild. Previously, there was only a way to pass options to the builder, via pdebuild, but not to configure pdebuild itself. There are some times when that's useful, such as to pass --use-pdebuild-internal. This was based on a patch from Rafał Długołęcki.

You can get the latest version of git-pbuilder from my scripts page.

Dariusz Dwornikowski: Automatic PostgreSQL config with Ansible [Planet Debian]

If for some reasons you can’t use dedicated DBaaS for your PostgreSQL (like AWS RDS) then you need to run your database server on a cloud instance. In these kind of setup, when you scale up or down your instance size, you need to adjust PostgreSQL parameters according to the changing RAM size. There are several parameters in PostgreSQL that highly depend on RAM size. An example is shared_buffers for which a rule of thumb says that is should be set to 0.25*RAM.

In DBaaS, when you scale the DB instance up or down, parameters are adjusted for you by the cloud provider, e.g. AWS RDS uses parameter groups for that reason, where particular parameters are defined depending on the size of the RAM of the RDS instance.

So what can you when you do not have RDS or any other DBaaS? You can always keep several configuration files on your instance, each for a different memory size, you can rewrite you config every time you change the size of the instance… or you can use Ansible role for that.

Our Ansible role will be very simple, we will have two tasks. One will change the PostgreSQL config, the second one will just restart the database server:

---
- name: Update PostgreSQL config
  template: src=postgresql.conf.j2 dest=/etc/postgresql/9.5/main/postgresql.conf
  register: pgconf

- name: Restart postgresql
  service: name=postgresql state=restarted
  when: pgconf.changed

Now we need the template, where are the calculations take place. RAM size will be taken from the Ansible’s fact called ansible_memtotal_mb. Since it returns RAM size in MBs, we will stick to MBs. We will define the following parameters, you can adjust them to your needs:

  • shared_buffers, as 0.25*RAM size,
  • work_mem, as shared_buffers/max_connections,
  • maintenance_work_mem, as RAM GBs times 64MB,
  • effective_cache_size, as 0.75*RAM size.

For max_connections we will define a default role variable of 100 but we will allow to specify it at a runtime. The relevant parts of the postgresql.conf.j2 are below:

 max_connections = {{ max_connections }}      
 shared_buffers = {{ (((ansible_memtotal_mb/1024.0)|round|int)*0.25)|int*1024 }}MB
 work_mem = {{ ((((ansible_memtotal_mb/1024.0)|round|int)*0.25)/max_connections*1024)|round|int }}MB
 maintenance_work_mem = {{ ((ansible_memtotal_mb/1024.0)|round|int)*64 }}MB
 effective_cache_size = {{ (((ansible_memtotal_mb/1024.0)|round|int)*0.75)|int*1024 }}MB

You can now run the role every time you change the instance size, and the config will be changed accordingly to the RAM size. You can extend the role and maybe add other constraints and change max_connections to you specific needs. An example playbook could look like:

---
hosts: my_postgres
roles:
  - postgres-config 
vars:
  - max_connection: 300

And run it:

$ ansible-playbook playbook.yml

The complete role can be found in my github repo.

Russell Coker: SSD and M.2 [Planet Debian]

The Need for Speed

One of my clients has an important server running ZFS. They need to have a filesystem that detects corruption, while regular RAID is good for the case where a disk gives read errors it doesn’t cover the case where a disk returns bad data and claims it to be good (which I’ve witnessed in BTRFS and ZFS systems). BTRFS is good for the case of a single disk or a RAID-1 array but I believe that the RAID-5 code for BTRFS is not sufficiently tested for business use. ZFS doesn’t perform very well due to the checksums on data and metadata requiring multiple writes for a single change which also causes more fragmentation. This isn’t a criticism of ZFS, it’s just an engineering trade-off for the data integrity features.

ZFS supports read-caching on a SSD (the L2ARC) and write-back caching (ZIL). To get the best benefit of L2ARC and ZIL you need fast SSD storage. So now with my client investigating 10 gigabit Ethernet I have to investigate SSD.

For some time SSDs have been in the same price range as hard drives, starting at prices well below $100. Now there are some SSDs on sale for as little as $50. One issue with SATA for server use is that SATA 3.0 (which was released in 2009 and is most commonly used nowadays) is limited to 600MB/s. That isn’t nearly adequate if you want to serve files over 10 gigabit Ethernet. SATA 3.2 was released in 2013 and supports 1969MB/s but I doubt that there’s much hardware supporting that. See the SATA Wikipedia page for more information.

Another problem with SATA is getting the devices physically installed. My client has a new Dell server that has plenty of spare PCIe slots but no spare SATA connectors or SATA power connectors. I could have removed the DVD drive (as I did for some tests before deploying the server) but that’s ugly and only gives 1 device while you need 2 devices in a RAID-1 configuration for ZIL.

M.2

M.2 is a new standard for expansion cards, it supports SATA and PCIe interfaces (and USB but that isn’t useful at this time). The wikipedia page for M.2 is interesting to read for background knowledge but isn’t helpful if you are about to buy hardware.

The first M.2 card I bought had a SATA interface, then I was unable to find a local company that could sell a SATA M.2 host adapter. So I bought a M.2 to SATA adapter which made it work like a regular 2.5″ SATA device. That’s working well in one of my home PCs but isn’t what I wanted. Apparently systems that have a M.2 socket on the motherboard will usually take either SATA or NVMe devices.

The most important thing I learned is to buy the SSD storage device and the host adapter from the same place then you are entitled to a refund if they don’t work together.

The alternative to the SATA (AHCI) interface on an M.2 device is known as NVMe (Non-Volatile Memory Express), see the Wikipedia page for NVMe for details. NVMe not only gives a higher throughput but it gives more command queues and more commands per queue which should give significant performance benefits for a device with multiple banks of NVRAM. This is what you want for server use.

Eventually I got a M.2 NVMe device and a PCIe card for it. A quick test showed sustained transfer speeds of around 1500MB/s which should permit saturating a 10 gigabit Ethernet link in some situations.

One annoyance is that the M.2 devices have a different naming convention to regular hard drives. I have devices /dev/nvme0n1 and /dev/nvme1n1, apparently that is to support multiple storage devices on one NVMe interface. Partitions have device names like /dev/nvme0n1p1 and /dev/nvme0n1p2.

Power Use

I recently upgraded my Thinkpad T420 from a 320G hard drive to a 500G SSD which made it faster but also surprisingly quieter – you never realise how noisy hard drives are until they go away. My laptop seemed to feel cooler, but that might be my imagination.

The i5-2520M CPU in my Thinkpad has a TDP of 35W but uses a lot less than that as I almost never have 4 cores in use. The z7k320 320G hard drive is listed as having 0.8W “low power idle” and 1.8W for read-write, maybe Linux wasn’t putting it in the “low power idle” mode. The Samsung 500G 850 EVO SSD is listed as taking 0.4W when idle and up to 3.5W when active (which would not be sustained for long on a laptop). If my CPU is taking an average of 10W then replacing the hard drive with a SSD might have reduced the power use of the non-screen part by 10%, but I doubt that I could notice such a small difference.

I’ve read some articles about power use on the net which can be summarised as “SSDs can draw more power than laptop hard drives but if you do the same amount of work then the SSD will be idle most of the time and not use much power”.

I wonder if the SSD being slightly thicker than the HDD it replaced has affected the airflow inside my Thinkpad.

From reading some of the reviews it seems that there are M.2 storage devices drawing over 7W! That’s going to create some cooling issues on desktop PCs but should be OK in a server. For laptop use they will hopefully release M.2 devices designed for low power consumption.

The Future

M.2 is an ideal format for laptops due to being much smaller and lighter than 2.5″ SSDs. Spinning media doesn’t belong in a modern laptop and using a SATA SSD is an ugly hack when compared to M.2 support on the motherboard.

Intel has released the X99 chipset with M.2 support (see the Wikipedia page for Intel X99) so it should be commonly available on desktops in the near future. For most desktop systems an M.2 device would provide all the storage that is needed (or 2*M.2 in a RAID-1 configuration for a workstation). That would give all the benefits of reduced noise and increased performance that regular SSDs provide, but with better performance and fewer cables inside the PC.

For a corporate desktop PC I think the ideal design would have only M.2 internal storage and no support for 3.5″ disks or a DVD drive. That would allow a design that is much smaller than a current SFF PC.

David Moreno: Perl 5.12's each function [Planet Debian]

With Perl 5.12 released earlier this summer, the each function got a nice little addition that I’d like to talk about: It now has the ability to work on arrays, not only key-value pair hashes, but not exactly as you’d expect it (not like Ruby’s each method).

The traditional way to work with each, using a hash:

my %h = (
    a => 1,
    b => 2,
    c => 3,
);

while(my($key, $value) = each %h) {
    say "index: $key => value: $value";
}

And the output. Of course, hashes being unordered lists, you won’t get the nice little order of an array.

index: c => value: 3
index: a => value: 1
index: b => value: 2

Now, when you use an array, each will return the next pair on the list consisting on the index of that element’s position and the position itself. Since it returns the next pair, you can iterate through it on the same fashion as when using a hash:

my @arr = ('a'..'z');

while(my($index, $value) = each @arr) {
    say "index: $index => value: $value";
}

This is particularly useful to access direct named variables, both the index and the element, while looping through an array.

index: 0 => value: a
index: 1 => value: b
index: 2 => value: c
index: 3 => value: d
index: 4 => value: e
index: 5 => value: f
index: 6 => value: g
index: 7 => value: h
index: 8 => value: i
index: 9 => value: j
index: 10 => value: k
index: 11 => value: l
index: 12 => value: m
index: 13 => value: n
index: 14 => value: o
index: 15 => value: p
index: 16 => value: q
index: 17 => value: r
index: 18 => value: s
index: 19 => value: t
index: 20 => value: u
index: 21 => value: v
index: 22 => value: w
index: 23 => value: x
index: 24 => value: y
index: 25 => value: z

David Moreno: Running find with two or more commands to -exec [Planet Debian]

I spent a couple of minutes today trying to understand how to make find (1) to execute two commands on the same target.

Instead of this or any similar crappy variants:

$ find . -type d -iname "*0" -mtime +60 -exec scp -r -P 1337 "{}" "meh.server.com:/mnt/1/backup/storage" && rm -rf "{}" \;

Try something like this:

$ find . -type d -iname "*0" -mtime +60 -exec scp -r -P 1337 "{}" "meh.server.com:/mnt/1/backup/storage" \; -exec rm -rf "{}" \;

Which is:

$ find . -exec command {} \; -exec other command {} \;

And you’re good to go.

David Moreno: Disable Nginx logging [Planet Debian]

This is something that is specified clearly on the Nginx manual, but it’s nice to have it as a quick reference.

The access_log and error_log directives on Nginx are on separate modules (HTTP Log and Core modules respectively) and they don’t behave the same way when all you want is to disable all logging on your server (in our case, we serve a gazillion static files and perform a lot of reverse proxying and we’re not interested on tracking that). It’s a common misconception that you can set error_log to off, because that’s how you disable access_log (if you do that, the server will still log to the file $nginx_path/off). Instead, you have to set error_log to log to the always mighty black hole /dev/null using the highest level for logging (which triggers the fewest events), crit:

http {
  server {
    # ...
    access_log off;
    error_log /dev/null crit;
    # ...
  }
  #...
}

If you’re the possessor of the blingest of bling-bling, you can disable all logging (not only for a server block), by putting error_log on the root of the configuration and access_log within your http block and make sure you don’t override that on any of the inner blocks. And you’re good to go.

David Moreno: RVM + Rake tasks on Cron jobs [Planet Debian]

RVM hates my guts. And it doesn’t matter, because I hate RVM back even more. Since I was technologically raised by aging wolfs, I have strong reasons to believe that you just shouldn’t have mixed versions of software on your production systems, specially, if a lot of things are poorly tested, like most of Ruby libraries, aren’t backward compatible. I was raised on a world where everything worked greatly because the good folks at projects like Debian or Perl have some of the greatest QA processes of all time, hands down. So, when someone introduces a thing like RVM which not only promotes having hundreds of different versions of the same software, both on development, testing and production environments, but also encourages poor quality looking back and looking forward, there isn’t anything else but to lose faith in humanity.

But enough for ranting.

I had to deliver this side project that works with the Twitter API and the only requirement pretty much was that it had to be both run from the shell but also loaded as a class within a Ruby script. And so I did everything locally with my great local installation of Ruby 1.8.7. When it came the time to load on the testing/production server I found myself on a situation where pathetic RVM was installed. After spending hours trying to accommodate my changes to run properly with Ruby 1.9.2, I set up a cron job using crontab to run my shit every now and then. And the shit wasn’t even running properly. Basically, my crontab line looked something like this:

*/30 * * * * cd /home/david/myproject && rake awesome_task

And that was failing, crontab was returning some crazy shit like “Ruby and/or RubyGems cannot find the rake gem”. Seriously? Then I thought, well, maybe my environment needs to be loaded and whatever, so I made a bash script with something like this:

#!/bin/bash
cd /home/david/myproject
/full/path/to/rvm/bin/rake -f Rakefile awesome_task

And that was still failing with the same error. So after trying to find out how cron jobs and crontab load Bash source files, I took a look at how Debian starts its shell upon login. And while that didn’t tell me that much that I didn’t know, I went to look at the system-wide /etc/profile and found a gem, a wonderful directory /etc/profile.d/ where a single shitty file was sitting, smiling back at me, like waiting for me to find it out and swear on all problems in life: rvm.sh. /etc/profile is not being loaded when I just run /bin/bash by my crappy script, only when I log in, I should’ve known this. Doesn’t RVM solve the issue of having system-wide installations so the user doesn’t have to deal with, you know, anything outside of his own /home ?

So I had to go ahead and do:

#!/bin/bash
source /etc/profile
cd /home/david/myproject
/full/path/to/rvm/bin/rake -f Rakefile awesome_task

And hours later I was able to continue with work. Maybe this will help some poor bastard like myself on similar situation on the future.

Of course one can argue that I could’ve installed my own RVM and its Ruby versions, but why, oh why, if it was, apparently, already there. Why would I have to fiddle with the Ruby installations if all I want is get my shit done and head to City Bakery where I can spend that money I just earned on chocolate cookies? My work is pretty simple to run with pretty much any ancient version of Ruby, nothing fancy (unless you call MongoMapper fancy). RVM is a great project that doesn’t solve an issue, but just hides some really fucked up shit on the Ruby community.

David Moreno: Geo::PostalCode::NoDB 0.01 [Planet Debian]

Geo::PostalCode is a great Perl module. It lets you find surrounding postal areas (zip codes) around a given an amount of miles (radius), calculate distance between them, among other nice features. Sadly, I couldn’t get it to work with updated data and because the file its Berkely DB installer was producing was not being recognized by its parser, which bases off on DB_File. Since I was able to find working data for the source of zip codes, I ended up hacking the module and producing a version with no Berkeley DB support.

So basically, and taken from the POD:

RATIONALE BEHIND NO BERKELEY DB
On a busy day at work, I couldn’t get Geo::PostalCode to work with newer data (the data source TJMATHER points to is no longer available), so the tests shipped with his module pass, but trying to use real data no longer seems to work. DB_File marked the Geo::PostalCode::InstallDB output file as invalid type or format. If you don’t run into that issue by not wanting to use this module, please drop me a note! I would love to learn how other people made it work.

So, in order to get my shit done, I decided to create this module. Loading the whole data into memory from the class constructor has been proven to be enough for massive usage (citation needed) on a Dancer application where this module is instantiated only once.

$ sudo cpanm Geo::PostalCode::NoDB now!

Cameron Seader: Traffic shaping with virtual pfsense and SLES 12 KVM Host [Planet openSUSE]

My traffic shaping has really worked out using pfsense to lower my buffer bloat and get better network performance.



I built my own pfsense from a Dell OptiPlex 990 SFF PC with an Intel Core i5-2400 3.1GHz. I have installed an Intel PRO/1000 VT Quad Port Server Adapter LP PCI-E for more networks and vlans on my network. Traffic shaping was a breeze with pfsense. I of course run pfsense virtualized as the OS itself doesn't work on the hardware physically. BSD seems to have a limited hardware support than Linux these days. It was really the fact that BSD kernel didn't have the right support for this chip and kept hard locking with a kernel error that made no sense. So I have installed SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP1 as the HOST OS which is humming along with no kernel errors and pfsense is running as a KVM virtual machine. I have bridged all the network interfaces for the virtual machine and it works great. Its been running for 3 months now with no troubles.

Now to try out Sophos UTM. Looks like a fun alternative to pfsense and its Linux based. :-)


Simon Quigley: A look at Lubuntu's LXQt Transition [Planet Ubuntu]

This blog post is not an announcement of any kind or even an official plan. This may even be outdated, so check the links I provide for additional info.

As you may have seen, the Lubuntu team (which I am a part of) has started the migration process to LXQt. It's going to be a long process, but I thought I might write about some of the things that goes into this process.

Step 1 - Getting a metapackage

This step is already done, and it's installable last time I checked in a Virtual Machine. The metapackage is lubuntu-qt-desktop, but there's a lot to be desired.

While we already have this package, there's a lot to be tweaked. I've been running LXQt with the Lubuntu artwork as my daily driver for a few months now, and there's a lot missing that needs to be tweaked. So while you have the ability to install the package and play around with it, it needs to be a lot different to be usable.

Also in this image are our candidates (not final yet) for applications that will be included in Lubuntu. Here's a current list of what's on the image:

An up-to-date listing of the software in this metapackage is available here.

Step 2 - Getting an image

The next step is getting a working image for the team to test. The two outstanding merge proposals adding this have been merged, and we're now waiting for the images to be spun up and added to the ISO QA Tracker for testers.

Having this image will help us gauge how much system resources are used, and gives us the ability to run some benchmarks on the desktop. This will come after the image is ready and spins up correctly.

Step 3 - Testing

An essential part of any good operating system is the testing. We need to create some LXQt-specific test cases and make sure the ISO QA test cases are working before we can release a reliable image to our users.

As mentioned before, we need test cases. We created a blueprint last cycle tracking our progress with test cases, and the sooner that those are done, the sooner Lubuntu can make the switch knowing that all of our selected applications work fine.

Step 4 - Picking applications

This is the tough step in all of this. We need to pick the applications that best suit our users' use cases (a lot of our users run on older hardware) and needs (LibreOffice for example). Every application will most likely need a week or two to do proper benchmarking and testing, but if you have a suggestion for an application that you would like to see in Lubuntu, share your feedback on the blueprints. This is the best way to let us know what you would like to see and your feedback on the existing applications before we make a final decision.

Final thoughts

I've been using LXQt for a while now, and it has a lot of advantages not only in applications, but the desktop itself. Depending on how notable some things are, I might do a blog post in the future, otherwise, see for yourself. :)

Here is our blueprint that will be updated a lot in the next week or so that will tell you more about the transition. If you have any questions, shoot me an email at tsimonq2@lubuntu.me or send an email to the Lubuntu-devel mailing list.

I'm really excited for this transition, and I hope you are too.

Not to be immodest but I believe my reboot of Eragon vastly... [Join me, won't we?]



Not to be immodest but I believe my reboot of Eragon vastly improves on the original.

lastowka: thehungryhungryreader: I’ve got something... [Join me, won't we?]



lastowka:

thehungryhungryreader:

I’ve got something interesting and experimental planned for Thanksgiving this year, and it uses this exciting new app called @squishtoon! Here’s a test animation I did featuring the uncompensated likeness of @kwmurphy, who may or may not feature prominently in this project… but it’s not like anyone associates him and his friends with Thanksgiving, right?

This is literally what Kevin does every time we rehearse something

Hitting the plastic slopes: Climate change pushes ski resorts to 'weatherproof' [CBC | Technology News]

Ski and snowboarding resorts around the world are finding ways to maximize the amount of snow they have and attract visitors with other activities that don't depend so much on Mother Nature.

YouTube producers go to class to learn secrets of turning online fame into fortune [CBC | Technology News]

Workshops focus on helping creators make ad revenue, partner up with brands and create merchandise.

Radio Northern Ireland Weekend Broadcasts [The SWLing Post]

RNIe!SLnew

 

Good Afternoon everyone,

Radio Northern Ireland will be broadcasting tonight 1900UTC on 6005khz via Shortwave Service in Germany, and then followed by 15770khz via WRMI at 2100 UTC and further more on 11580khz at 0130 UTC. Our show tonight is jam packed with talking and a few special shortwave articles as well! SSTV will also be sent out in Scottie 2 mode. I hope you enjoy the shows this evening! A full list of broadcasts can be found below ;

  • Shortwave Service 6005khz – 1900 UTC (Saturday)
  • WRMI 15770khz – 2100 UTC (Saturday)
  • WRMI 11580khz – 0130 UTC (Saturday UTC date)
  • WRMI 9955khz – 0130 UTC (Monday)

Your reports are very welcome to radionorthernireland@outlook.com and if you wish to donate to keep us on the air! Donations are very welcome to radionorthernireland@outlook.com. We QSL by card as well, again a donation of $2 would be most kindly received.


Jordan Heyburn (MI6JVC) is the author of this post and a regular contributor to the SWLing Post. Jordan is an avid shortwave listener, ham radio operator and shortwave presenter/owner of Radio Northern Ireland. Jordan is based in Northern Ireland.

HAARP facility to re-open in 2017 [The SWLing Post]

Aerial view of the HAARP site, looking towards Mount Sanford, Alaska (Source: Wikipedia)

Aerial view of the HAARP site, looking towards Mount Sanford, Alaska (Source: Wikipedia)

(Source: ARRL)

Let the conspiracy theories resume! Alaska’s High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) facility will reopen in 2017. The sprawling facility now is under the ownership of the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF), and the UAF Geophysical Institute is preparing HAARP for a new sponsored research campaign that’s set to begin early next year, UAF Researcher Chris Fallen, KL3WX, told ARRL.

“This involves, for example, reinstalling the vacuum tubes in each of the 10 kW amplifiers — eventually 360 in total — that were removed by the US Air Force [the facility’s former owner] for warm storage in the main facility,” Fallen said. He later clarified that’s just one-half of the 720 tubes required to equip all of HAARP’s transmitters. “For the first campaign we will only be bringing half of the array online, as we will only have half the tubes installed,” he explained. “It’s a long process and we have limited resources.” He noted that the transmitter shelters have been unheated since the previous campaign in the summer of 2014. “The five generators — approximately 3 MW each — have recently been tested individually and are verified operational.”

Continue reading on the ARRl News website…

Is Barry ready to battle Zoom? Catch up on the latest episode of... [The Flash]



Is Barry ready to battle Zoom? Catch up on the latest episode of The Flash now: on.cwtv.com/FLASH217tb

Can Barry make Eobard Thawne an ally? Find out on the latest... [The Flash]



Can Barry make Eobard Thawne an ally? Find out on the latest episode of The Flash: on.cwtv.com/FLA217tb

Happy Friday. Here’s a Meerkat! [WIL WHEATON dot NET]

This was a good week for me. I got a lot of creative work done, including almost 10,000 words on a short story that keeps getting longer and is more fun to discover and tell than I was expecting. I also ran a whole bunch, with a decent pace, as I train to increase my conditioning and strength for a 10K, and maybe a half-marathon later this year.

Also, I took a picture of a meerkat when Anne and I went to the zoo on Monday, and I liked it enough to share it with you, Internet:

Meerkat

Meerkats are so cute, I always think they should be holding tiny coffee cups and talking about TPS reports.

Anyway, I wish everyone a relaxing and peaceful weekend. Be kind to one another.

‘Sexual assaults on children’ at Greek refugee camps [Blazing Cat Fur]

Children as young as seven have been sexually assaulted in official European refugee camps, the Observer has been told. The claims come as testimony emerges suggesting that some camps are so unsafe that youngsters are too terrified to leave their tents at night.

Charities and human rights groups allege that children stranded in supposedly safe camps in Greece that were built to deal with Europe’s migration crisis – many of whom are likely to be eligible to claim asylum in the UK – have been sexually abused.

In one government-run camp, in a former Softex toilet roll factory on the outskirts of Thessaloniki, aid organisations claim that the level of risk of sexual attack is so acute that women are too afraid to visit the camp toilets alone at night.

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BREAKING: Terrified shoppers flee mall after ‘shots fired’ while families trapped inside [Blazing Cat Fur]

Terrified shoppers have taken to Twitter, claiming to be inside the Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, North Carolina.

Eyewitnesses said they have run from the mall after hearing the gunshots.

I used to live nearby, shopped there many times, this is an older but very large and popular mall in Raleigh, NC.

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The Nature of the War Against Us [Blazing Cat Fur]

Love death. This is the improbable instruction that the founder of an Egyptian sect called the Muslim Brotherhood imparted to his followers in the 1920s. A disciple named Mohammed Atta copied this instruction into his journal just before leading the attack on the World Trade Center three days before my biopsy. Was it a coincidence that this dark creed took root in a country of monuments to the human quest for life beyond the grave? The sentence Mohammed Atta actually jotted down was this: “Prepare for holy war and be lovers of death.”

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Ten Most Troubling Finds Inside House Probe of Pentagon’s ‘Distorted’ Intel on Islamic State [Blazing Cat Fur]

TEL AVIV – A damning investigation by House Republicans released on Wednesday has found that the intelligence arm of the U.S. Military’s Central Command (CENTCOM) routinely produced intelligence that “distorted, suppressed, or substantially altered” the results of the campaign against the Islamic State.

Breitbart Jerusalem reviewed the House report and herein presents the ten most troubling finds, in no particular order.

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Mass shooter, 26, is arrested after opening fire on a truck and a church van – injuring five people [Blazing Cat Fur]

A 26-year-old man has been arrested after five people were injured Saturday morning in apparently random roadway shootings, police said.

Police say there is no apparent motive for the shootings, which were allegedly carried out by Tom S. Mourning II shortly after 5am in Joplin, Missouri, the Joplin Globe reports.

I heard Trump was responsible. Again.

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And Now For Something Completely Different [Blazing Cat Fur]

stray-dog-waits-flight-attendant-adopts-rubio-olivia-sievers-16

A flight attendant adopts a dog who waited for her outside of her hotel:

German flight attendant Olivia Sievers first met Rubio, the stray dog, in Buenos Aires during one of her frequent flights to Argentina 6 months ago. Sievers showed the lonely pooch affection and gave him some food and that was it – the dog couldn’t bear the idea of never seeing Sievers again, so he started waiting for her outside her hotel every time she’d come to Buenos Aires.

“I tried to change my way as I didn’t want him to follow me to the hotel but it was not possible he always followed me so I tried [to wait] one hour but he always watched me and followed me,” Sievers told Noticiero Trece. Sievers even found a home for Rubio in Buenos Aires but he escaped it and returned to the hotel to wait for her. By that time Sievers fell in love with him too, so she decided to adopt him and bring to Germany. Now Rubio is not a lonely stray anymore, he’s getting plenty of love and play time at his new home with other 2 dogs and Sievers, his soulmate. The waiting is finally over.

 

**

Moose frolic in sprinklers:

 

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Sweden: Summer Inferno of Sexual Assaults [Blazing Cat Fur]

In the wake of the New Year’s Eve attacks in Cologne, Germany, news broke in Sweden that a large number of sexual assaults against girls and women had occurred at the music festival “We Are Sthlm” [short for Stockholm] in both 2014 and 2015, but had been covered up by both the police and the media. The National Police Commissioner, Dan Eliasson, immediately launched an investigation to find out the scope of the problem.

The results were presented in May, in a report, “The current situation regarding sexual assault and proposals for action” — and the conclusions are frightening. Almost all the perpetrators who attacked in groups and who have been apprehended, are citizens of Afghanistan, Eritrea and Somalia — three of the four largest immigrant groups in Sweden who fall into the category of “unaccompanied refugee children.”

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Islam’s Hatred of Dogs [Blazing Cat Fur]

Please see here (a bit dated):

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Racial Tensions Arise After Shooting of Aboriginal Man [Blazing Cat Fur]

Here we go:

Racial tensions are flaring in Saskatchewan after the fatal shooting of a First Nations man who relatives say was just looking for help with a flat tire.

Colten Boushie, 22, was killed Tuesday after the vehicle he was in drove onto a farm in the rural municipality of Glenside, west of Saskatoon.

Boushie’s cousin, Eric Meechance, said he and three other friends were also in the car, heading home to the Red Pheasant First Nation after an afternoon spent swimming at a river.

But Meechance said they had a tire blow out and that’s how they ended up at the farm.

“That guy just come out of nowhere and he just smashed our window,” said Meechance.

Meechance said they tried to drive away, but ended up colliding with a parked car. He then ran for safety as gunshots rang out.

“Running is probably what saved all of our lives, you know, because if he’s going to shoot one, he’s probably would have shot us all,” he said.

“He wasn’t shooting to scare us. He was shooting to kill.”

Gerald Stanley, 54, is charged with second-degree murder. He is to make his next court appearance in North Battleford on Aug. 18. …

First Nations leaders say the RCMP news release about the shooting was biased.

The first police news release said that people in the car had been taken into custody as part of a theft investigation.

Chief Bobby Cameron of the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations said the RCMP statement “provided just enough prejudicial information” for people to draw the conclusion that the shooting was somehow justified.

“The messaging in an RCMP news release should not fuel racial tensions,” he said. …

Robert Innes, a University of Saskatchewan indigenous studies professor in Regina, said the situation shows the community divide.

“You can see that the racial tension is basically a tinder box in Saskatchewan,” said Innes.

Speaking generally, Innes said some farmers are blaming First Nations people for rural crime. Their mentality is to protect their property, he said.

“So there’s this real fear and contempt towards indigenous men by many white people, to the point where they will shoot before asking questions.”

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Mother Blames Lack of Government Resources For Radicalised Son’s Death [Blazing Cat Fur]

I didn’t realise that it was a pro-Islamist government’s job to dissuade her son from murdering people:

A former Calgary woman whose 22-year-old radicalized son was killed while fighting alongside Islamic extremists in Syria two years ago says the federal government failed both Aaron Driver and his family.

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NHK WORLD RADIO JAPAN - English News at 20:01 (JST), August 13 [English News - NHK WORLD RADIO JAPAN]

Kenny Baker, The Actor Inside R2-D2, Dies At 81 [Outside the Beltway]

Kenny Baker R2D2

Kenny Baker, best known as the man inside R2-D@, one of only two characters to appear in all of the principal Star Wars films that have been released to date, has died at the age of 81:

Kenny Baker, the British actor who rose to fame by playing the robot R2-D2 in six “Star Wars” films, died on Saturday. He was 81.

His death was confirmed by a spokeswoman for Lucasfilm, the company that created and produces the enormously popular “Star Wars” franchise.

Mr. Baker was a little person whose adult height was widely reported to be 3 feet, 8 inches. He referred to his short stature as “my height difficulties” in an autobiographical sketch on hisofficial website, but it would have been impossible for a taller man to play the role that made him famous.

“They said, ‘You’ve got to do it; we can’t find anybody else. You’re small enough to get into it and you’re strong enough to be able to move it,'” he said of R2-D2’s cylindrical metal costume in a video interview in Stockholm that he shared on his website. “I was a godsend to them, really.”

Mr. Baker was born on Aug. 24, 1934, in Birmingham, England. He began his entertainment career in 1950 as part of a traveling troupe in Britain called Burton Lester’s Midgets.

He soon left that act and toured the country for many years, performing in theaters, nightclubs and holiday resorts in a variety of roles: a circus clown, a performer in an ice-skating show and, later, as part of a musical comedy and variety act alongside the performer Jack Purvis. (Mr. Purvis also acted in “Star Wars,” playing the diminutive, cloaked Jawa who shoots R2-D2, Mr. Baker said.)

The traveling act brought Mr. Baker financial security and a measure of fame in Britain, but it was an entertainment ecosystem that was wiped out by the invention of television. Then came R2-D2. That role began with the 1977 release of “Star Wars,” but it was a part he almost did not take.

“This film came along and I turned it down,” Mr. Baker said during the interview in Stockholm. “I said, ‘I don’t want to be stuck in a robot, what for, for goodness sake.'”

He ultimately relented and agreed to take the job as a favor toGeorge Lucas, he said. The role had no lines — the character’s signature beeps and boops were not voiced by Mr. Baker — and, seated inside the robot, he never showed his face. But R2-D2 so changed his career that in later years he told an interviewer that if he could go back in time, he would do it again for free.

“Had I known I would have done it for nothing because he was broke at the beginning, he didn’t have a penny, George,” Mr. Baker said.

But he might have asked for a share of the film’s profits, he said. “I’d be a millionaire like Alec Guinness was!”

While Baker was present in all of the scenes that featured R2 in the original trilogy, his role was reduced in the prequel trilogy as many of the robot’s appearances were accomplished via robotic replacements or CGI effects. For the as-yet unnamed Episode VIII, set to be released in 2017 and which is currently in production, Baker’s role was taken over by a new actor due to his retirement, although Baker was kept on board with a credited role as a consultant for the role.

Follow Up on My Mercantilism Post [Outside the Beltway]

Okay, so I read some of the comments in my last post, and going to reply here on the main page.

First up is this comment by grumpy realist,

Except that there are a few things that you leave out:

1) National security. We could use the same logic to “outsource” all of our military hardware as well to the nation with the lowest cost-why don’t we do that? Heck, we could outsource all of our MILITARY outside this country, arms and the man together-why don’t we do that?

2) Moving everything in the direction of cheapest cost will prove to be a false economy if your populace-without-jobs decides to have a revolution.

3) Don’t be so enamored of the “oh if we pay any more than the absolute bottom of the economy it’s welfare” idea. Wage supports may be the one thing keeping the lumpenproletariat from invading your house and looting everything. Driving everything down to Chinese wages means the workers can only afford Chinese prices, Chinese level of environmental protection, and Chinese safety. You really want to take a chance on that?

4) Ever heard the term “race to the bottom”?

This has very little to nothing to do with national security or the military. The military is something that the government typically provides and not the market due to the significant free rider problem. The notion that the military will be “outsourced” is just grasping at straws.

The second point is what happens in the domestic economy. Firms look for the low cost method of production. In fact, I would argue that quite a bit of innovation is to lower the cost curve for firms, domestic and foreign, and allow firms to earn economic profits for a period of time. And if we flip it…do we really want an economic process that seeks out higher and higher cost production processes? That is the recipe for economic prosperity? Why aren’t employers simply increasing employee wages, paying more in terms of rent for their floor space, etc.? Nothing is stopping them from arbitrarily raising costs right now. No, this point makes literally no sense.

Point number 3 completely missed the point that I noted about payments to the factors of production. Those payments go up, in a competitive system, as the workers become more productive. And workers become more productive the more specialized their work. It was all there in my post. If we were to reduce specialization people would have to become more self-sufficient. And by that I mean they’d have to produce things they currently purchase in the market. I used the grocery store as an example. But lets go with something far more simple…the humble pencil. I use the pencil when discussing economics with co-workers because it looks so damn simple. But…anyone know exactly how to make a pencil? I mean could you make one right now? I couldn’t and I’d be willing to be all of the commentators could not either. They lack the supplies, the tools and/or the know how. Could anyone make a pencil without…yes WITHOUT going out and buying at least some of the inputs? If you answer yes, please tell us where you obtain the graphite. A picture of your mine and mining equipment would be lovely. Next, a picture of your chainsaw an tree(s) oh and yes, tell us how you’ll produce the rubber eraser. What is the point here? That the market allows us to specialize in only a small part of overall economic production and become very good at it and become significantly more productive and that by exchange in said market process we can all be significantly better off.

And yes, some people are going to be uniquely unsuited for success, even marginal success, in a market based economy. However, moving away from a market based economy is not the answer. Moving away from a market based economy is to move towards a more self-sufficient economy–i.e. where you have to do for yourself vs. using your higher income in a market economy to buy those goods and services you cannot self supply. This is not the answer because I’m pretty sure those people who are not well suited for success in a market based economy are also not going to be well suited for success in a self-sufficient economy. And in the self-sufficient economy everyone is going to have less resources for themselves let alone helping others, especially when there is little to no perceived benefit.

As for point 4, the bottom of what? The bottom in terms of cost? Great! I love paying less for the same product. What quality might decrease, well people are willing to pay more for better quality. Quality and quantity are trade offs that firms and consumers make on a day-to-day basis in the domestic economy. Why is it suddenly bad when it is done between countries. Yes, it is bad if fraud is involved, but that is why we have courts and the law and the government. To punish those who engage in it. Our legal system when it comes to business and the economy is largely like the criminal side: reactive. It does not seek to proactively prevent fraud, but to prevent fraud by punishing those who engage in it. Further, where it is proactive….is precisely where people like Donald Trump complain: regulations. Oh the irony.

Our next post is by Slugger.

I think economic theory is too abstract and too glib. My last US made car was a 1980 Jeep Cherokee, and I and most Americans are better off due to imports, but not everybody. These large shifts in customer allegiance hurt somebody, and often the people who are hurt are the most vulnerable segments of the population. Image a town with one guy making a million a year and ten workers making fifty thou. As a result of opening trade barriers, the millionaire’s income increases to 1.5 million, and each small guys ‘ income drops to forty thou. Looking simply at the numbers that is a good net increase for the town. However, if you look at marginal utility or at human happiness/suffering the town is not better off. Economic theory treats people as fungible widgets, but in reality switching to a different enterprise or moving to a more dynamic part of the country comes with real human costs. In the US, income for middle class people has been stagnant while a tiny elite gets richer. Sadly, there are very few NFL starting quarterback slots available.

Economic theory looks at dollars through a mathematical prism. It needs to account for human happiness and suffering from economic displacement. I sort of understand the Schumpeterian argument about the positive values of dismantling less efficient sectors, but I do think that every job has a human face and every closed plant has some tears with the hopes for a better future. I guess that’s what makes me of the left.

[Note: I added a paragraph break in there for readability]

I agree with some parts of this…kind of. I do think that economists spend too much time looking at aggregate data which can be both misleading (even when correct) and also of dubious value (when incorrect or incomplete). Take for example data on household income. Economists are often prone to taking that day for say the last 20 or 30 years and treating it as if it were comparable. But it may not be. Suppose the in the data there are more single parent households, or more households of illegal immigrants, or more (or fewer) children. Or that there are more (or fewer) college graduates or that the distribution of college degrees have changed. All of these things can make the numbers incomparable. Economists know this, and try to get more data. Data on the composition of the household, educational levels, and so forth. But there is always a limit. As with non-economists there comes a point where you’ll stop collecting data as the cost of doing so will outweigh the benefits (at the margin)….or so you think. Further, as I have pointed out with co-workers aggregated data hides information and distorts it.

As for the town example, that is true, we could look at the aggregate numbers and say, “Oh, no problem. Overall incomes have increased, so nothing to see here move along.” But again, this can happen even without international trade. If it is bad with international trade…why is not bad when it happens without international trade. If you object to this you should object to it irrespective of the cause being international trade or just domestic economic activity.

Further, this is what happens in the market process. Schumpeter called it creative destruction. When somebody innovates they inevitably destroy something that came before. When somebody innovated with the ipod, they set in motion the destruction of cassette players. Similarly with the DVD. They put in motion the destruction of video tape players. Not literal destruction, but…can you even buy a VHS recorder in a store? I haven’t looked in years. And with streaming I’m pretty sure there is now tremendous pressure on DVD production. So, if you want to preserve jobs…stop innovation of all sorts. Innovations that save money, innovation that gives us new products, and so forth. And yes, the “destruction” part of creative-destruction is hard on people. But invariably many recommendations to deal with that destruction are implicitly to stop the creation part of the process. In fact, I do not think you can have the creation portion without the destruction portion also. So the solutions for the destruction side of the process is to find ways to ease the discomfort that causes, and no that won’t be easy either. So while I agree with some aspects of the comment it appears to be missing the forest because of the trees.

Our next comment, and the last one I’ll address in this post is from Ben Wolfe who has been pounding the drum that mercantilism was not anti-trade.

It’s not a big deal for Montana to run a trade deficit with California because the currency monopolist called the U.S. government makes large block grants to replenish the lost financial assets.

Suggesting the deficit of a customer with Wal-Mart is equivalent to a trade deficit with Germany is asinine

P.S.: Mercantilism was a policy of ensuring maximum generation of national wealth by balancing trade to support domestic wellbring. It was never anti-trade.

First of, no financial assets have been lost. That is just completely untrue. Second that one trades financial assets for goods and services is done so on the basis that such a trade makes both parties better off at least ex ante. This comment suggests that because I trade a financial asset, money, for all the groceries I want makes me strictly better off. The grocery is also strictly better off. And as I noted, this is a trade relationship where I run a persistent and on going trade deficit and thank God!

And it is nice you think comparing a trade deficit with Wal-Mart is equivalent with a trade deficit with Germany is asinine, but that isn’t an argument is a baseless assertion. You literally sound like Donald Trump.

As for mercantilism, even with put the best make-up job on this pig it still comes down to being implicitly anti-trade. You simply cannot have every country running a positive trade surplus at the same time. It would be, literally, impossible. Somebody has to run a trade deficit. And trying to have the balance of trade be precisely zero is to argue for substantial State control of the economy. Congratulations on being a fairly extreme statist. Here is Murray Rothbard,

Mercantilism, which reached its height in the Europe of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, was a system of statism which employed economic fallacy to build up a structure of imperial state power, as well as special subsidy and monopolistic privilege to individuals or groups favored by the state. Thus, mercantilism held exports should be encouraged by the government and imports discouraged.

If every country is discouraging imports while trying to encourage exports it is exactly like pissing up a rope. This is precisely what happened with the Smoot-Hawley Tariff in 1930. It is quite clear that that legislation had a very deleterious effect on the not just the U.S. economy the world economy as well. I would encourage everyone to listen to this podcast at EconTalk that has Thomas Rustici as the guest. Rustici takes on the notion that Smoot-Hawley was not a significant factor. He points out that while the primary effects were “small” in that trade was not as significant as it is now, that the secondary and tertiary effects resulted in a significant worsening of the economic situation. For example, one of the U.S. primary exports was agricultural goods and that with the passage of Smoot-Hawley and the concomitant retaliatory trade restrictions by other countries the prices for agricultural goods dropped sharply. This lead to farmers being unable to pay back bank loans and due to the unit banking in many states during that era that those banks in turn would fail and wipe out deposits for the entire community. And that such bank failures can take on a contagion like aspect leading to sound banks facing runs and shutting down due to being illiquid (and letting an illiquid bank fail is just bad central banking policy).

As for promoting overall well being; I’m sorry but you don’t do that by telling people they can’t buy the things they want to buy and that they have to buy something they don’t want that also costs more.

Inside The Trump Implosion [Outside the Beltway]

Donald Trump Victory

The New York Times Alexander Burns and Maggie Haberman have today’s must-read in the form of a behind the scenes look at what appears for all the world to be a floundering Trump campaign:

Donald J. Trump was in a state of shock: He had just fired his campaign manager and was watching the man discuss his dismissal at length on CNN. The rattled candidate’s advisers and family seized the moment for an intervention.

Joined by his daughter Ivanka and her husband, Jared Kushner, a cluster of Mr. Trump’s confidants pleaded with him to make that day — June 20 — a turning point.

He would have to stick to a teleprompter and end his freestyle digressions and insults, like his repeated attacks on a Hispanic federal judge. Paul Manafort, Mr. Trump’s campaign chairman, and Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey argued that Mr. Trump had an effective message, if only he would deliver it. For now, the campaign’s polling showed, too many voters described him in two words: “unqualified” and “racist.”

Mr. Trump bowed to his team’s entreaties, according to four people with detailed knowledge of the meeting, who described it on the condition of anonymity. It was time, he agreed, to get on track.

Nearly two months later, the effort to save Mr. Trump from himself has plainly failed. He has repeatedly signaled to his advisers and allies his willingness to change and adapt, but has grown only more volatile and prone to provocation since then, clashing with a Gold Star family, making comments that have been seen as inciting violence and linking his political opponents to terrorism.

Advisers who once hoped a Pygmalion-like transformation would refashion a crudely effective political showman into a plausible American president now increasingly concede that Mr. Trump may be beyond coaching. He has ignored their pleas and counsel as his poll numbers have dropped, boasting to friends about the size of his crowds and maintaining that he can read surveys better than the professionals.

In private, Mr. Trump’s mood is often sullen and erratic, his associates say. He veers from barking at members of his staff to grumbling about how he was better off following his own instincts during the primaries and suggesting he should not have heeded their calls for change.

He broods about his souring relationship with the news media, calling Mr. Manafort several times a day to talk about specific stories. Occasionally, Mr. Trump blows off steam in bursts of boyish exuberance: At the end of a fund-raiser on Long Island last week, he playfully buzzed the crowd twice with his helicopter.

But in interviews with more than 20 Republicans who are close to Mr. Trump or in communication with his campaign, many of whom insisted on anonymity to avoid clashing with him, they described their nominee as exhausted, frustrated and still bewildered by fine points of the political process and why his incendiary approach seems to be sputtering.

He is routinely preoccupied with perceived slights, for example raging to aides after Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, in his re-election announcement, said he would stand up to the next president regardless of party. In a visit to Capitol Hill in early July, Mr. Trump bickered with two Republican senators who had not endorsed him; he needled Representative Peter T. King of New York for having taken donations from him over the years only to criticize him on television now.

(…)

Sitting with Mr. Rove in the Manhattan apartment of a mutual friend, the casino magnate Steve Wynn, Mr. Trump said he would compete in states like Oregon, which has not voted Republican since Ronald Reagan’s 1984 landslide. Mr. Rove later told people he believed Mr. Trump was confused and scared in anticipation of the general election, according to people who have heard Mr. Rove’s account.

A few weeks later, when Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey brokered a meeting at Trump Tower between Mr. Trump and governors from around the country, Mr. Trump offered a desultory performance, bragging about his poll numbers, listening passively as the governors talked about their states and then sending them on their way.

Mr. Trump never asked them for their support, three people briefed on the meeting said.

More at the link, where the authors paint a picture that sounds strikingly similar to historical descriptions of Richard Nixon’s last days in office when the President surrounded himself with supporters and yes men who did little but reinforce his own paranoia and belief in the correctness of his actions. Also, keep this article in mind the next time you hear that the Trump campaign is telling reporters that we’re going to see a “more disciplined” Donald Trump. Clearly, such a thing is basically impossible at this point. Instead, we’re likely to see a repeating pattern of outrageous statements and efforts to reset the campaign that will ultimately prove to be fruitless when Trump once again goes off on his own. With Trump’s apparent refusal to follow anyone’s advice, including advice from his family members and close associates, it’s clear that he’s not going to change, and that means we’re in for another three months of Trump saying outrageous things, retreating after his campaign once again tries to right the ship, and then reemerging to say something else entirely outrageous. I have to assume that it’s quite frustrating for the campaign professionals that have signed on to Trump’s campaign since he clinched the nomination. After all, there have been numerous opportunities over the past two months alone during which the campaign could have build a message around a message, whether it’s the economy, or Clinton’s untrustworthiness, or the state of the world that President Obama and  former Secretary of State Clinton have left us with, but they are unable to do so because their candidate quite simply won’t change.

The more interesting thing about the article, of course, is what it reveals about Trump himself. As long suspected, this is a person who is not apt to listen to the advice of others, even when they clearly know more about a given subject than he does. Instead he is more inclined to trust his own instincts even when they are woefully misinformed and quite obviously destined to lead to disastrous results, This is hardly what we need or want in a President of the United States and should be sufficient to disqualify him in and of itself. On a daily basis, Presidents are called upon to deal with situations that they clearly aren’t going to be the primary experts on. That’s why they have Cabinet members and advisers around them to assist them in making important decisions. A President who isn’t willing to listen to advice isn’t likely to be a very good President at all, and may well be a considerably dangerous one. At least for the moment, the voters seem to be recognizing that fact.

Trump Shuts Down In New Jersey [Outside the Beltway]

Despite previous promises that he’d win the state, it looks like Donald Trump is giving up on New Jersey:

Donald Trump and his supporters claimed, once the Republican nomination was wrapped up, that traditionally blue New Jersey could be in play come November.

With great fanfare, Trump’s campaign opened a New Jersey office on May 3 in Edison, which attracted a crowd of more than 1,000 supporters, according to a local news account.

Later that month, when one statewide poll showed Trump within 4 points of Hillary Clinton in the state, the Republican nominee projected confidence about the outcome.

“I think so,” Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity on May 31, when asked if he could win New Jersey. “I mean, I love New Jersey. I am New Jersey. Like a second home. I have property there. I have a lot of employees there. And frankly, I think we’re going to do well.”

But the Trump campaign appears to have pulled up stakes in the Garden State.

After two messages left at the number of Trump’s New Jersey headquarters were not returned, POLITICO visited the nondescript suburban complex listed as its address.

That office no longer exists.

 (…)
“It’s not a surprise that he’s written off New Jersey because for the first time in my political life, he has to worry about winning states like Arizona and Georgia,” Roginsky said.
The last poll in the Garden state was a June Farleigh Dickinson University poll that showed Clinton leading Trump by 21 points, and it’s likely that Clinton’s lead has either remained steady or grown in the two months that have followed. Most likely, what we’re seeing here is the remainder of the Trump effort in the state being folded into the state GOP’s office where they’ll conduct their business from, but the lack of even one independent office in the state is basically a concession that the state is lost. This may be one of the few sane decisions the Trump campaign has made in the past two months.

Donald Trump: The Only Way I Lose Pennsylvania Is If Democrats Cheat [Outside the Beltway]

Trump Nixon V

Donald Trump told a crowd in Pennsylvania that the only way he can lose the Keystone State is if Democrats cheat:

Donald Trump again raised the specter of election fraud Friday, saying that the only way he would lose Pennsylvania is to Hillary Clinton is if “they cheat.”

The Republican nominee, speaking at a rally in Altoona, Pennsylvania, repeated his concerns about the fairness of the election.

“The only way we can lose, in my opinion — I really mean this, Pennsylvania is if cheating goes on and we have to call up law enforcement and we have to have the sheriffs and the police chiefs and everyone watching because if we get cheated out of this election, if we get cheated out of a win in Pennsylvania, which is such a vital state especially when I know what is happening here,” he said. “She can’t beat what’s happening here. The only way they can beat it in my opinion, and I mean this 100 percent, if in certain sections of the state they cheat.”

Trump has repeatedly claimed the election is “rigged” against him, laying some of the blame on the media.

This statement comes in the wake of a new set of polls, including three recent polls from Pennsylvania that show Clinton with a significant lead outside the margin of error in both a head-to-head match up with Trump and a four way race that includes Gary Johnson and Jill Stein. Moreover, as I’ve noted before, Pennsylvania is a state that Republicans have not won since George H.W. Bush won the state in his landslide victory over Michael Dukakis. Ever since then, the state has consistently, and rather overwhelmingly, gone for the Democratic candidate in every election. In 2008, for example, President Obama beat John McCain by more than 600,000 votes and beat Mitt Romney by roughly 300,000 votes in 2012. Even in relatively close election years such as 2000 and 2004, Al Gore and John Kerry both beat George W. Bush in the Keystone State by roughly 200,000 votes. The main reason for this is the fact that while wide swaths of Northern, Central, and Western Pennsylvania will go heavily for the Republican candidate it has become something of an historical norm that the largely Democratic, and heavily populated areas in and around Philadelphia and Pittsburgh are simply so large that they overwhelm whatever advantages Republicans have in the rest of the state. In off year and mid-term elections, turnout tends to be stronger in Republican parts of the state than in Democratic areas, so we end up with results like the GOP near-sweep of statewide offices that occurred in 2010, although that advantage wasn’t sufficient to save the state’s Republican Governor in 2014. Current polling shows that not only is Trump losing Pennsylvania, but he is losing badly in the Philadelphia and its suburbs, and in the Pittsburgh area. As long as that’s the case, neither he nor any Republican is going to win the Keystone state. If Trump wins it won’t be because of cheating but because Pennsylvania did what Pennsylvania has done in every election for the past twenty-four years.

In addition to being factually inaccurate this latest statement from Trump carries with it the same kind of danger that much of his other rhetoric about a ‘rigged’ system does, namely that it could have a significant and negative influence on how his supporters respond to what seems like an inevitable loss in November. If Donald Trump spends the next three months telling his supporters that the only way he can lose is if the other side cheats, which is of course a blatant lie, then he will contribute to undermining the legitimacy of another election, and that is likely to have a negative impact on how his supporters react to an election loss and how they act in the weeks, months, and years following the 2016. Much like his rhetoric about Mexicans, Muslims, and others, this is another example of how Trump appeals to the worst aspects of American politics and acts in a manner that does nothing but poison the well. Indeed, by claiming that only cheating can deny him the Presidency, Trump appears to be willfully establishing the license for his supporters to engage in violent or disruptive protests in response to a result that they simply chose not to accept. This is not the rhetoric of a reasonable, responsible candidate for office, it is the rhetoric of a demagogue who has come to enjoy whipping up a crowd into an irrational frenzy. Once again, it has come time to ask Trump’s fellow Republicans, and especially those such as Paul Ryan, Reince Priebus, Mike Pence, and others who have rallied around him. They’ve let a demagogue take over their party and they’re going to have to pay for it.

The Resurgence of Mercantilism [Outside the Beltway]

I do not get Donald Trump’s (or anyone else’s like Bernie Sanders) argument for protectionism/mercantilism. I do not understand why trade between nations is viewed a fundamentally different than trade between states in the U.S. or even between individuals and firms. To quote Don Boudreaux, I have been running a trade deficit with my grocery store ever since I started shopping for groceries. I always buy from them, but they in turn never buy anything from me. Clearly using the “logic” of these neo-mercantilists I must clearly be worse off with this arrangement. In fact, I would be so much better off if I would stop going to the grocery store and instead produce all the stuff I buy at the grocery store myself. Let me see, I’ll need some cows, some pigs. I’ll have to grow wheat and corn, I’ll need quite a bit more land too….oh yes, this will make me so much more better off. And I can spend all of my time doing this, so I’d better quit my job too.

Some might say, but it is different when it is another country. I’m still waiting for a good explanation of that one. How is it different? They aren’t Americans? So? Why should that matter? That Americans might lose their job? Okay. So what you are saying is that we should keep these people employed at a job that could be done with less cost. How is that different than welfare? It is no less a transfer of some of my income to those workers than if it were a literal cash transfer. Is that it? Are Trump and the neo-mercantilists espousing nothing more than workfare? Keeping people employed at a job that is actually more costly? That is a recipe for economic prosperity? I don’t think so.

What these neo-mercantilist are missing is that we are far, far better off today because of specialization. Specialization allows workers to be more productive than if they were a jack-of-all-trades (and master of none). Competition drives the payments to the factors of production up to their marginal revenue product. And that is determined in part by the workers productivity. Further, international trade encourages additional specialization. If one country’s workers are good at doing X and another country’s workers good at Y, each country specializing in X (or Y) and then trading can make both countries better off. That is what we do every day in the economy here inside the U.S. This what we do in each state and between each state. Why should it be different between countries?

Or to flip it around. Why is it not a big deal if Montana is running a trade deficit with say, California? Why is that not a problem? And if trade barriers are good between countries, why not erect them between states? Why not change the laws so that we can have trade barriers between states. Each state will see its employment levels explode right?

My guess is we all know that such a policy wouldn’t work out. Having less trade in general is not a recipe for having more trade. Donald Trump and the neo-mercantilists favor trade barriers. Barriers. That is they are literally arguing for less trade not more. Less trade is not a route to prosperity and thinking like that puts you in the same category as Randy Marsh in terms of understanding the economy.

Yes, we buy more stuff from Mexico than they buy from us. To Donald Trump and the neo-mercantilists this is bad. My guess is they see that we are spending more money than were are receiving as a bad thing. But we have to go back to the relationship between me and my grocery store. Yes, I am running a trade deficit with my local Albertsons (and Trader Joe’s too) but I am strictly better off because of this. I can walk into those stores and buy lots of stuff at low prices. And that is what Donald Trump and the neo-mercantilists appear to be missing. We are getting goods and services from these countries. We are getting goods and services we want otherwise we wouldn’t buy them. Free trade agreements also lower the prices of these goods and services we want. But somehow this is all bad.

Clinton Foundation Is Under FBI Investigation [RedState]

Hillary-whaaa

The Daily Caller's Richard Pollock reports that "multiple FBI investigations are underway involving potential corruption charges against the Clinton Foundation. The investigation centers on New York City where the Clinton Foundation has its main offices and while prosecutorial support will come from various U.S. Attorneys Offices, the New York-based probe is being led by Preet Bharara, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.

Bharara is best known for securing corruption convictions against the former New York Democrat State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and the former New York Republican Majority Leader Dean Skelos.

You might recall that during FBI Director James Comey's July 7, 2016 testimony before the House oversight committee, where Rep. Trey Gowdy was  able to get Comey to say there were six things Hillary Clinton said that were not true, Comey would not answer questions about any ongoing FBI investigation of the Clinton Foundation.

In a second article, Pollock reports that a Justice Department spokesman on Friday did not deny The Daily Caller story, saying only “we’re declining to comment” on it. According to Pollock, the FBI and Bharara’s office also declined comment.

A later article by Jonathan Haggerty explains why Preet Bharara could be Hillary's worst nightmare.

The post Clinton Foundation Is Under FBI Investigation appeared first on RedState.

Trump’s Former Campaign Manager Signs With Speakers Agency, Despite Nondisclosure Agreement [RedState]

The pugnacious little hobbit who formerly served as Donald Trump’s campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, has a new gig.

According to a report from POLITICO, Leading Authorities, a Washington-based talent agency, has posted a release, stating that they will be taking on Lewandowski as a client.

In a bio page on the website, the firm calls Lewandowski “bold and unapologetically aggressive,”

(vicious niblet)

and promises that his speeches will take audiences “behind the scenes of the Trump campaign to showcase how it has been singularly successful in tapping into shifting public opinion to devise a winning campaign strategy from the ground up.”

(Except it never got past the primary stages and ultimately there is no winning strategy.)

But Lewandowski’s ability to divulge behind-the-scenes details might be limited by the “strict confidentiality agreement” he acknowledged signing with Trump as a condition of his employment on the campaign.

That same agreement should have kept Lewandowski from taking a job with CNN as a paid commentator, but it didn’t.

But then, why should it? He has used his position with CNN to continue to stump for his old boss.

Leading Authorities’ website calls Lewandowski “a larger than life persona who’s not afraid to ‘go there,’” and promises that he will reveal to audiences “how he tapped into voter emotion and emerging political strategies to do the unthinkable.”

(Likely one of very few times Lewandowski has been referred to as “larger” than anything.)

Lewandowski had no political experience and basically put Trump on cruise control, allowing him to do whatever and say whatever he wanted, counting on the free media publicity as a campaign strategy.

It worked during the primaries, in a crowded field, where the rest were carrying out normal campaigns. Trump appealed to those voters that didn’t want to have to think that hard about their choices and who could be easily led by angry rhetoric.

Going from the primary to the general required actual work, however, and neither Lewandowski or Trump were prepared, so Lewandowski was ousted in favor of the alleged Russian mob fixer, Paul Manafort.

The website indicates that Lewandowski can be booked as a solo speaker or “paired with a Democratic colleague.” The firm’s roster of political speakers also includes interim Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Donna Brazile and former Obama aides Anita Dunn and Stephanie Cutter, as well as GOP figures Alex Conant, Ed Gillespie, Dana Perino and Nicolle Wallace.

I can’t be sure, but if you want to be manhandled by Lewandowski, that may cost you extra.

 

The post Trump’s Former Campaign Manager Signs With Speakers Agency, Despite Nondisclosure Agreement appeared first on RedState.

Finally SOMEONE Who Agrees With Trump Claim That Obama Founded ISIS [RedState]

Donald Trump has been taking a lot of flak for his claim that Barack Obama is the "founder of ISIS," a claim he later doubled-down on (before later insisting it was sarcasm). It's led to another string of bad media for the Trump campaign, who is undoubtedly looking for good news and support in their hour of need.

And that support has come.

The leader of Lebanon's militant Hezbollah group quoted Trump at a rally in the country's south Saturday, saying the presidential candidate's statements were based on facts.

Hassan Nasrallah says: "this is an American presidential candidate who is saying this. What he says is based on facts and documents."

Trump is desperately in need of allies, but I'm not exactly sure how well this one is going to work out for him. Because, you know, Hezbollah is a terrorist organization and all that. But, at this point, Trump really needs some allies to back him. Everyone says he's severely lacking in the global policy department, and I think supporters like Russia and Hezbollah really show that he's totally got this covered.

The post Finally SOMEONE Who Agrees With Trump Claim That Obama Founded ISIS appeared first on RedState.

WaterCooler, Saturday! 8/13/2016 – Open Thread – Fiorina, Flossing, Fracking Heat [RedState]

watercooler featured

If Trump Loses, Will Fiorina Win?

This fall could be a boon for Carly Fiorina. If the left leaning polls are right and Donald Trump loses, Carly could be well situated to clear the deck of the rocked Republican ship and muster in conservative leadership at the RNC, thereby reasserting the forward momentum we had after the 2014 Republican Congressional sweep.

Current RNC Chairman Reince Priebus hasn't indicated he may remove "chairman's duties" from his list of To-Dos, but he is "expected to step down in January 2017."

Regardless of Priebus' intentions, if Trump wins Priebus is out. Remember this article in the Washington Post from April?

Asked in the interview whether he would retain RNC Chairman Reince Priebus in that scenario, Trump replied: “I don’t know. I haven’t made the determination.”

If Trump loses, Priebus is out. The loss of the Republican party, whether to Trump or a win by the Democrats will stamp his envelope back to Wisconsin. It's a lose-lose for the chairman.

Carly is considered one of the strongest contenders for Priebus' seat, however her decision to forego endorsement of her party's nominee and a clear bias for Ted Cruz (Carly picked as Cruz VP) going into the 2020 election, doesn't say "shoe-in." She's got some wooing to do.


Flossing is Overrated.

When the US Dept of Health released it's 2015-2020 new dietary guidelines flossing was omitted and with nary a footnote across mainstream or social media.

But first the AP was nosing around asking questions.

Last year, the Associated Press asked the departments of Health and Human Services and Agriculture for their evidence, and followed up with written requests under the Freedom of Information Act.

The AP looked at the most rigorous research conducted over the past decade, focusing on 25 studies that generally compared the use of a toothbrush with the combination of toothbrushes and floss. The findings? The evidence for flossing is "weak, very unreliable," of "very low" quality, and carries "a moderate to large potential for bias."

Whether in response to the AP's research or by their own determination, HHS, unable to find verifiable proof, meaning even one lengthy, costly study, concluded flossing should not be included in our daily routine.

Smoking is bad. Water is good. Political junkies are prone to anxiety and depression every 4 years. Flossing can help prevent gum disease. All very common sense conclusions. No study required.


Heat Wave.

The next 5 days are forecast to be Hazy, Hot and Humid especially in the Northeast, but across the country, as well.

In aviation, it's called "The Three Hs." An aircraft's performance is significantly reduced in these conditions in part due to less dense air, which means less available oxygen for its engine to operate at peak performance. If there is less available oxygen for an aircraft's engine, there's less available oxygen for you to breathe.

Turn the big screen 4K on, sit in your comfy chair and enjoy the Olympics.

Go Team USA!


 

Happy WaterCooler, Saturday! Welcome to RedState's ONLY daily Open Thread.

I'm reiterating yesterday's 'Cooler invite to RedStaters at the RedState Gathering. I, for one, am Very interested in the hour to hour at the Big Show.

The losers who didn't go, like myself, are prepared to be well informed. We're listening. Enjoy!

 

 

The post WaterCooler, Saturday! 8/13/2016 – Open Thread – Fiorina, Flossing, Fracking Heat appeared first on RedState.

Zika Emergency Declared as Obama and Democrats Continue to Put Politics Before Public Health [RedState]

Zika Virus

The Obama administration declared a Zika public health emergency in Puerto Rico Friday:

As a consequence of the outbreak of Zika virus and its potential effect on pregnant women and children born to pregnant women with Zika, on this date and after consultation with federal and local public health officials as necessary, I, Sylvia M. Burwell, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, pursuant to the authority vested in me under section 319 of the Public Health Service Act, do hereby determine that a public health emergency of national significance exists within the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico relating to pregnant women and children born to pregnant women with Zika.

The Declaration comes as 10,690 Puerto Rican residents have already been infected by the virus, including 1,035 pregnant women. The New York Times reports that the number of cases of Zika infection are expected to keep rising through October, and by year’s end, a quarter of the island’s population of 3.5 million will have been exposed.

Senate Democrats blocked passage of $1.1 billion federal spending to fight the Zika virus, putting politics over public health. As Sen. Senator Marco Rubio put it, “It’s a talking point that they want to take into the July Fourth recess.” The Democrats are trying to obfuscate their Zika political gamesmanship by claiming they object to Republican policy and funding changes. Those changes are simply the result of the Democrats having lost the 2014 midterm election after President Obama nationalized the election by saying his policies were on the ballot, "every single one of them."

Hillary Clinton's traffic jamming photo op campaign stop in Miami to urge Congress to cut short its summer recess, return to the Capitol and pass emergency funding, the funding Democrats blocked, to combat the Zika virus, demonstrates that Rubio is right and the Democrats' blockage of the Zika Funding is simply more politics at the expense of public Health.

If Obama and the Democrats really want more money to spend fighting Zika Obama, as requested in a letter from Senators Ted Cruz and John Cornyn and every Republican Member of the Texas congressional delegation could spend the nearly $400 million in unobligated Zika prevention funding the Obama Administration has not yet allocated. Obama could also join Republicans in calling on Members of Congress to stop the Democrats' filibuster of additional funding for Zika prevention and response measures.

The post Zika Emergency Declared as Obama and Democrats Continue to Put Politics Before Public Health appeared first on RedState.

Trump Wants “Election Observers” to Prevent the Massive Cheating He Expects [RedState]

His whining and belly-aching know no bounds, and he’s going to ride this all the way through his loss in November.

POLITICO is reporting today on the latest move made by the Trump campaign in his Tour of Whine.

Donald Trump's campaign is seeking to recruit "election observers" following the Republican nominee's repeated claims that the general election is "rigged."

In a move that's unprecedented in a presidential election, the campaign late this week launched a page on its website proclaiming, "Help Me Stop Crooked Hillary From Rigging This Election! Please fill out this form to receive more information about becoming a volunteer Trump Election Observer."

Those who wish to be a Trump "observer" are asked to fill out information on the website that should match their voter registration. Once submitted, voters are directed to a donation page.

Trump was in Altoona, Pennsylvania on Friday night and as he has in recent rallies around the country, he made his predictions of massive cheating by the Clinton machine.

I’m not entirely convinced he’s wrong. The biggest cheat was likely made before Trump entered the race, but I digress…

“She can’t beat what’s happening here. The only way they can beat it in my opinion, and I mean this 100 percent, if in certain sections of the state they cheat,” Trump said of Clinton campaign in Pennsylvania.

Although laws vary from state to state, campaigning by political parties is typically banned at polling sites under voter intimidation laws.

I’ve worked polling sites during elections. Poll watchers are allowed, but they’re not to be on hand to campaign for a particular candidate.

This is Trump laying a heavy foundation to account for the inevitable outcome in November.

I guess it beats running a professional and competent campaign.

The post Trump Wants “Election Observers” to Prevent the Massive Cheating He Expects appeared first on RedState.

Maybe Donald Trump Won’t Debate After All [RedState]

So, for a while now, I just assumed Donald Trump was going to do what Donald Trump does best - ginning up attention to the debates by complaining at them. The media gets played like the fiddle they are, writing "Donald Trump Threatens to Skip Debate" headlines and everyone ignores an NFL game to see if he shows and what he's going to say.

Then, I look at the poll numbers. And then I look at the stories about an emergency meeting between his campaign and the party. And then I look at the chaos that is his campaign. That's about the time I realize mother of God maybe he shouldn't debate.

Maybe he won't.

Don't get me wrong. I think he absolutely should debate. I think fleeing at this point only hurts him more than anything Hillary Clinton could say to his face. Hillary is still someone you could reasonably take on in a debate. And any trap questions or lies from her (that go unchallenged by the media) will just solidify his supporters around him and even have an outside chance of bringing more under his banner.

However, not showing up shows weakness. It puts forward the idea that he doesn't want to challenge her. That image will absolutely hurt him more because the entire idea of voting Republican right now is to take Hillary down. If the Republican candidate doesn't seem committed to that idea, then how can the voters?

Then I remember that I'm thinking in the traditional mindset of politics and how they work. We say "Yes, you absolutely show up to a debate. What the hell are you thinking by even considering not doing it?" Except Donald Trump boosted his media profile before by toying with the debates. Granted, the media atmosphere is not as positive toward his campaign as it was, but media attention is what he feeds on. His rabid fan base only gets more rabid as time goes on.

Donald Trump will make a call based on how it affects his brand. Does losing a debate to Hillary hurts his image more than not showing up at all? Because he's fighting for his brand rather than running a campaign, that question will become harder to answer. I still lean toward my original theory - he's trying to create more media attention to draw a bigger crowd to the debates. But I fully realize he could come to the conclusion that to save his reputation, he might want to skip it.

The post Maybe Donald Trump Won’t Debate After All appeared first on RedState.

Constitution Party Candidate Darrell Castle In His Own Words [RedState]

On several occasions, I’ve mentioned that I am a political nomad, at this point. The Republican party has left me and is now the Trumplican party. Its ideology is one I no longer recognize, nor do I identify with it.

My faith will not allow me to stand with Trump.

Principle over party.

For that same reason, I could never see myself standing with any Democrat, much less Hillary Clinton.

In weeks past, I’ve mentioned that I was considering the platform of the Constitution Party, and their ticket, Darrell Castle and Scott Bradley. Since that time, there have been several write-ups here at RedState that are pretty critical of Mr. Castle and the Constitution Party.

What I’m finding with those who have a problem with Castle is that they fall into one of two categories:

  1. He’s not Gary Johnson.
  2. He’s not Ted Cruz.

With the Johnson supporters, I get it. You want a third party and you feel more inclined to lean towards the Libertarians.

The Cruz folks puzzle me, however. They’re trying to hold a spot for Cruz that won’t be open for at least 4 years. It doesn’t make sense to try and torpedo any conservative not named Cruz, in the meantime. They also seem to (wrongly) feel that Cruz is the only true defender of the Constitution, yet, a party built on Constitutional purity is abhorrent to them, and anyone attempting to launch a candidacy built on that Constitutional purity without Ted Cruz’s stamp of approval is rejected.

Bizarre train of thought, but our freedom to choose a side, no matter the reason, is one that won’t be denied us.

In the meantime, I sought out Mr. Castle with a few pointed questions, in the hopes of presenting an unvarnished look at the candidate, not based on any biases or favor for one candidate over another. He was good enough to answer those questions, in some detail.

************************************************

SW: What is it that you see going on in this nation today that makes the Constitution Party a necessity, heading into the future?

DC: Neither of the candidates for the two major parties understand the need for Constitutional government. Mrs. Clinton knows about it, knows that it exists and that she has to occasionally mention it but she has no regard for it and no intention of ever following it.

Mr. Trump knows nothing about it and cares nothing about it. His attitude is that it is like a curious national keepsake; interesting but not to be examined too closely.

It is, in fact the supreme law of the land. It is what separates us from others. Without it the phrases "we are a nation of laws and not of men" and "we are all created equal" and "the rule of law" are at best clichés and actually lies.

When Mrs. Clinton set up her private email she knew it was wrong and she also knows that the "rule of law" that is defined as no one above the laws sanction and no one beneath its protection is dead. She knew she would not be prosecuted because she knew there is a separate law for people like her.

When the general public wakes up to that fact, I fear the result will be violent.

There is still time to restore the rule of law to America.

 

SW: Given the struggle of third parties to break past the stranglehold of the “Big Two” party system in this nation, what needs to happen at the grassroots level to make the Constitution Party real competitors for voter consideration?

DC: The people in the third party movements and those who are coming their way have to finally give up on getting anything from the establishment and vow to stop begging for scraps from the establishment table. When that happens the grassroots will begin to see through and ignore the defamatory attacks by agents of the establishment and just continue to march.   In addition, the grass roots must develop the numbers, the passion, and the stamina to press on despite the odds until the right moment when the establishment finally collapses as it inevitably will.

We must come to realize that when we seek to limit government to its Constitutional boundaries, we will be ignored and hated. We must toughen ourselves to endure the persecution until we achieve victory because failure is not an option.

 

SW: Why are you running on the Constitution Party ticket? What is your personal philosophy of government?

DC: I am running on the Constitution Party ticket because I want to restore the Constitution to what it says it is, the supreme law of the land. I want to run a 10th Amendment Presidency and return liberty to individuals and sovereignty to the states.

 

SW: When considering the choices for a running mate, what is it about Scott Bradley that made him a fit for your campaign?

DC: I've known Scott for at least 20 years and consider him a dear friend. I know that he is very well versed in the Constitution and the original intent of the founders. He is from Utah and is very knowledgeable about the land issues especially in the West where the federal government owns a great deal of those states. I would like to see those lands returned to the people.

 

SW: Many Christians who might otherwise find the Constitution Party a suitable ideological home may be hesitant to take that leap because of what they see as an almost “isolationist” foreign policy, that would exclude partnership and protections of Israel… a very important issue for Christians. How do you address those concerns?

DC: Christians and others will have to listen and read for themselves about my foreign policy rather than gather it from the establishment or mainstream media. People will have to understand that the mainstream will always be hostile to anyone that challenges the status quo and therefore will report in a biased fashion. Any policy that does not involve an entry into every rattlesnake's nest around the world is not isolationist, instead it is peace. War should be used for the defense of the United States only. I remind people that the president takes an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States from all enemies foreign and domestic. The Constitution doesn't permit most of the international interventions that we engage in.

Foreign military adventure is not international engagement, it is war. International engagement is trade for which I am a great supporter. We should trade with all nations who want to trade with us in as friendly a manner as possible.

As for Israel I've outlined my policy many times. Israel is a most important ally in the Middle East and for the most part Israel's enemies are our enemies. I am against foreign aid for anyone since there is no Constitutional basis for it, but I know that if we cut off the billions in aid to Israel's enemies and potential enemies, Israel would not need our help. We provide much aid, a lot of it military, to countries that have previously been enemies of Israel and without that Israel would not need to be an American dependent. It seems to me that maintaining a dependent nation is a Democrat policy. Israel has more than 300 nuclear weapons as well as the systems to deliver them on target. Those are enough nuclear weapons to destroy the major cities of all their enemies. The Israelis are therefore fully capable of defending themselves. I would not sit by and watch Israel be overrun and conquered, but at the same time, I don't believe that could ever happen.

 

SW: A lot of Republicans have been turned off by the current state of the party and are looking at the Constitution Party. While they may agree that our borders have gone unprotected for far too long and illegal immigration, sanctuary cities, and issues of this nature are a drag on our system, they still disagree with the Republican nominee and the angry rhetoric he has pushed. What is the Constitution Party answer to the border and immigration problem?

DC: Immigration should be stopped completely until the borders are secure. We have an obligation as a nation to secure our borders and the Federal Government is Constitutionally obligated to protect the states from invasion. Once the borders are secure enough that we know who is coming and why, we can admit as many people as we want. The borders should be secured by whatever means prove necessary just as this nation should be defended from attack by whatever means available and necessary.

I would not be in favor of granting asylum to those here illegally but neither would I deport them wholesale.

 

SW: A final question: In the first 100 days of a Castle administration, what would be the first priority?

DC: In the first 100 days I would move the United States to withdraw from the United Nations so that we could be a free and independent country able to make our way in the world with leaders accountable to the American people. I would explain to the American people why I think that action is necessary.

I would move Congress to repeal the Federal Reserve Act and take back control of our monetary policy and I would explain that to the American people as well. That would be a necessary start to a growing, dynamic economy.

The debt needs to be addressed quickly and I would do that in conjunction with ending the Federal Reserve.

At the same time I would be starting the process of defunding Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers. Life needs to be recognized for the God given gift that it is.

*******************************************************

I thank Mr. Castle for his willingness to answer my questions.

For you, the reader, and those who may be honestly seeking a new ideological home, this will hopefully give you at least a starting point for your search.

The post Constitution Party Candidate Darrell Castle In His Own Words appeared first on RedState.

New Hack Attack: Democrats Get Hit Again [RedState]

They did it again.

Yesterday, I told you about the rather toothless hit on Republicans by the same hacker (or hackers), Guccifer 2.0, that hit the Democrats before their convention.

Now it seems that they’re taking another swipe at the Democrats.

A hacker posted cellphone numbers and other personal information of nearly 200 current and former congressional Democrats on Friday, the latest public disclosure of sensitive records this election season.

The hacker, or group of hackers, going by the name “Guccifer 2.0” said the records were stolen as part of a breach of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. A number of files were posted onto Guccifer 2.0’s website, including a spreadsheet that has information for 193 people, such as phone numbers and email addresses. The cellphone numbers of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of California and Democratic WhipSteny Hoyer of Maryland were among the information posted.

Not all the information is current, apparently. One email address was no longer active, but the fact that they have this information and are putting it public is of great concern.

The posting of the cellphone numbers and personal email addresses of members of Congress has national security implications. Included in the spreadsheet were the personal information of members of the House Intelligence, Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees. Foreign spies could use that information to try to intercept sensitive communications.

A number of U.S. intelligence officials believe the most likely culprit for stealing the DCCC data, as well as a large batch of records from the Democratic National Committee, are hackers backed by the Russian government. At least one cybersecurity company has said there appear to be links between the Russians and the entity identifying itself as Guccifer 2.0, although the hacker has denied being connected to Moscow.

It's an interesting contrast between what has been hacked and revealed from the Democrats and what has been hacked and revealed from the Republicans.

Some earlier murmurings were that the Russian government is trying to influence the outcome of the race between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, knowing that a Trump administration would be more amenable to Russia’s ambitions in the Ukraine and beyond.

Trump didn’t help ease those suspicions with his remark about having the Russians “find” Clinton’s missing emails.

Now we wait to see if the Republicans are hit again, next.

The post New Hack Attack: Democrats Get Hit Again appeared first on RedState.

BREAKING: Hacked GOP Emails Posted on Same Site That Nailed the Democrats [RedState]

Well, here they come – the RNC hacked emails.

The Hill is reporting:

A website tied to the hacking scandal of the Democratic Party has now posted a small batch of leaked emails from Republican campaigns and state GOP staffers.

The emails on the site, known as DCLeaks, appear to be from state party officials and former Republican presidential candidates, including Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). The messages range from June to October of 2015.

For the moment, the emails appear to range between tame to absolute nothing burgers, at least in comparison to the leaks released before the DNC convention.

For most part, they consist of campaign activities, fund raisers, and invites or RSVPs to events.

The emails include a wide array of constituent email addresses. Many appear to be responses to mass-emails from concerned party supporters writing in to their delegates. One reply to a Stop Hillary PAC fundraising email targeting Democrats lack of support for the Benghazi commission reads, "Don’t the Republicans have a majority in Congress? Isn’t John Boehner a Republican? What is the problem that you need my $36 to help you fight back."

Yeah. Good question. If somebody sifts through all that they may find a few choice words from Yours Truly.

The archive appears to be incomplete, with replies to emails that don't appear to be included on their own. That could mean the emails were deleted before being retrieved, or that the leaker or site decided to scrub certain items from the record.

So it’s not just the Democrats who are susceptible to Russian hackers. Guccifer 2.0 is thought to be a front name for Russian intelligence.

The site, DCLeaks, purports to be from “patriotic Americans,” but the language used is in broken English, suggesting non-English speakers as the authors.

The Russian hackers, nicknamed Fancy Bear, have a pattern of using domain registrars outside of United States that accept bitcoin and the Romanian THCServers fit the mold. It is registered to an email account from europe.com, which, like most of the emails connected to FancyBear, is a free web service based in Europe.

Just hang on to your hats. If the emails that are being released are as vanilla as it initially sounds, then why bother? Either these non-English speakers are setting up the GOP for a bigger punch, or they simply want to prove that nobody is safe.

 

The post BREAKING: Hacked GOP Emails Posted on Same Site That Nailed the Democrats appeared first on RedState.

Hope Solo should be banned from all future American national teams [RedState]

If you're going to play sports in the name of the United States of America, you need to be like the British Royal Family. You need to show some class, and represent the best of what our nation has to offer.

It's time Hope Solo got kicked off the team.

You see, Hope Solo and the rest of the women's team lost to Sweden playing soccer. But Solo didn't like that, and thought it was very unfair. Very very unfair. She even attacked the Swedes, calling them "cowards" because they played to win instead of just handing the game to the USA.

This is unacceptable. If you're good enough to win, go win. If you're not, congratulate the other team and overcome them next time. Making cheap personal attacks at the other team because they found a way to beat you is pathetic.

Kick Hope Solo from the team and don't let her play for America again as long as she behaves in this manner. Her comments make us all look a little bit worse than we did before she opened her big mouth.

The post Hope Solo should be banned from all future American national teams appeared first on RedState.

American States: Economic Competitiveness vs. Political Leanings [Small Dead Animals]

Yesterday a Democrat friend posted on Facebook about "how obvious" it was that liberal (ie. Democrat) run states were much more prosperous than conservative ones. I was curious about this statement so decided to check the facts. Using this link and this one, I compiled a table of the 10 most and 10 least economically competitive states:

US_Prosperity_Ranking.JPG

Incidentally, I passed on this information to my friend but have not heard a peep back from him about it. Imagine if a major news outlet had published a similar headline. How many people would bother to investigate? Yet after seeing multiple MSM outlets repeat the same things over & over again, it's easy to see how people's opinions get quickly shaped.

Update: Tim made an excellent comment which deserves follow-up. To further the discussion, here is the NY Times article he referred to, along with this rebuttal to it.

More Pavilions At Volkfest [Small Dead Animals]

Noonan;

Recently I spoke with an acquaintance of Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, and the conversation quickly turned, as conversations about Ms. Merkel now always do, to her decisions on immigration. Last summer when Europe was engulfed with increasing waves of migrants and refugees from Muslim countries, Ms. Merkel, moving unilaterally, announced that Germany would take in an astounding 800,000. Naturally this was taken as an invitation, and more than a million came. The result has been widespread public furor over crime, cultural dissimilation and fears of terrorism. From such a sturdy, grounded character as Ms. Merkel the decision was puzzling--uncharacteristically romantic about people, how they live their lives, and history itself, which is more charnel house than settlement house.

Ms. Merkel's acquaintance sighed and agreed. It's one thing to be overwhelmed by an unexpected force, quite another to invite your invaders in! But, the acquaintance said, he believed the chancellor was operating in pursuit of ideals. As the daughter of a Lutheran minister, someone who grew up in East Germany, Ms. Merkel would have natural sympathy for those who feel marginalized and displaced. Moreover she is attempting to provide a kind of counter-statement, in the 21st century, to Germany's great sin of the 20th. The historical stain of Nazism, the murder and abuse of the minority, will be followed by the moral triumph of open arms toward the dispossessed. That's what's driving it, said the acquaintance.

It was as good an explanation as I'd heard. But there was a fundamental problem with the decision that you can see rippling now throughout the West. Ms. Merkel had put the entire burden of a huge cultural change not on herself and those like her but on regular people who live closer to the edge, who do not have the resources to meet the burden, who have no particular protection or money or connections. Ms. Merkel, her cabinet and government, the media and cultural apparatus that lauded her decision were not in the least affected by it and likely never would be.

Nothing in their lives will get worse. The challenge of integrating different cultures, negotiating daily tensions, dealing with crime and extremism and fearfulness on the street--that was put on those with comparatively little, whom I've called the unprotected. They were left to struggle, not gradually and over the years but suddenly and in an air of ongoing crisis that shows no signs of ending--because nobody cares about them enough to stop it.

The powerful show no particular sign of worrying about any of this. When the working and middle class pushed back in shocked indignation, the people on top called them "xenophobic," "narrow-minded," "racist." The detached, who made the decisions and bore none of the costs, got to be called "humanist," "compassionate," and "hero of human rights."

It's Probably Nothing [Small Dead Animals]

Financial Times;

In recent years it has often been assumed that one reason central banks cut rates is to force investors and companies to move funds from low-yielding assets, such as bonds or cash, into more productive investments that could produce better returns and growth.

But that economic theory is not playing out.

The Sound Of Settled Science [Small Dead Animals]

Something strange is happening at the outer reaches of the solar system.​

Reader Tips [Small Dead Animals]

It's the Temptations -- Just My Imagination. Or if you prefer, the Stones' version. Tips thread open.

Signed, Guccifer 2.0 [Small Dead Animals]

Dear journalists, you may send me a DM if you're interested in exclusive materials from the DCCC, which I have plenty of.

Awkward. Those are documents from Nancy Pelosi's personal computer.

(If you're running Microsoft office products, think twice before downloading the files linked.)

Never Trump: Conservative Republican Jihadi Suicide Bombers [The DiploMad 2.0]

Bit of a rant. Written after spending a few hours at the Orange Country Fair in the heat looking at livestock--my wife has a friend who trains oxen . . . long story. Forgive any irrationality. But, I must say, I was impressed by the oxen. Massive, powerful, but very gentle beasts. Quite beautiful, actually.

As with most other nerds with no life, I spend most of my time unable to stay away from the news. An apparently constant feature of that "news" consists of tales of "Republicans" and "Conservatives" who refuse to vote for Trump and, in some cases, will even vote for Clinton. The New York Times recently published a letter signed by fifty so-called "G.O.P. National Security Officials" questioning Trump's "temperament" to be president. The letter is extraordinary for a number of reasons, but not the ones the liberal/progressive media promote. Most, not all, of the signatories are not Republicans. They form part of the rotating crew of first- and second-tier "experts" who float around Washington and land jobs with various administrations, Republican and Democrat. This group tended to get better jobs under Republican administrations, but they are very much part of the well-established cadre of "experts" who make a very nice living hanging around Washington and waiting for invites into the inner sanctum of power. These are not some sort of conservative core or corps finding the polices recommended by Trump to be dangerous. They are talking about "temperament" and almost everything they criticize Trump for allegedly suffering, one could ascribe to Obama in triple. Read the letter, you'll see what I mean when you substitute "Obama" for "Trump." I find remarkable that they cannot bring themselves to criticize the Obama-Clinton foreign policy that produced a remarkable series of disasters for America and the West. I suspect that some of them might resent that they were not called upon to form part of the Trump campaign, and see Trump blowing up their perceived entitlement to return to power with a GOP victory. Many, I further suspect, had counted on a Jeb Bush administration.

That said, however, there are plenty of self-proclaimed "conservatives" and "Republicans" (see my post on this) seeking what Bethell long ago labelled that "strange new respect," an award given to,

once-reliable conservatives who won liberal praise by adopting liberal policies. Of a sudden, an erstwhile Neanderthal would be treated in the Washington Post as someone who was no longer “simplistic” and “shrill” but rather a figure who had “grown” and showed himself to be “nuanced.”
We've seen prominent establishment "conservatives" such as George Will, Mitt Romney, and others (many of whom I respect) make clear their distaste for Trump. Look, one of the great things we still have in America is that you can vote for or against anybody you want, and, in fact, you do not even have to vote. Each person has the right to decide how or whether to employ his or her vote. No argument with that.

To argue, however, that it is better for Hillary Clinton, the most corrupt major party candidate in our history, to win because Donald Trump is not a "true" conservative or doesn't have the "temperament" is an outrageous argument, in my humble view. The damage that a Clinton administration could and would do to the USA over the next four to eight years is almost incalculable. The Supreme Court would be transformed completely, for example, into a tool of the Progressive movement and alter forever the face and character of this country. The first and second amendments, to name just two, would be gutted, and government would have nearly carte blanche to intrude into our lives in ways not yet imagined. Massive deficits, exorbitant taxes, unlimited immigration, climbing crime rates, growing poverty, weak foreign policy, and a deep, deep demoralization of the nation would result.

I heard many of the same arguments on Trump used when Reagan ran. Reagan, of course, was not a "true" conservative, but he proved a damn sight better for the country than would have another four years of Jimmy Carter. We heard all the same memes about foreigners horrified by the possibility of a Reagan presidency; that war would follow his election to office; that the economy would drown in an ocean created by the false promises of trickle-down economics, etc. It was all nonsense, of course, but that doesn't stop the Progs from recycling their talking points--many of those points, in fact, were originally drafted in the 1930's in Moscow.

If these "conservative" mandarins want to blow themselves up, that is their right. I just don't want my country to be the collateral damage.

I will vote for Trump.

League of lawsuits: Game developer sues cheat-toting website [The Register]

Riot breaks out the lawyers to take down illegal boost scripts

The makers of the popular game League of Legends have filed suit against the operators of a site that helps players cheat.…

More gums than Jaws: Greenland super-sharks live past 400 years old [The Register]

Typical specimen is older than America

Researchers from the University of Copenhagen have overturned biological thinking with the discovery that the Greenland shark, an apex predator swimming in the Arctic Ocean, can grow to over 400 years old.…

Pivot3 positions itself for possible IPO [The Register]

Breakneck growth company hires ex-Micron CFO

Is an IPO being planned? Hyper-converged system supplier Pivot3 says it had record growth in the first half of 2016, with a 103 per cent revenue increase and more than 400 new customers, and has hired a new CFO.…

Flipping heck! Virtual machines hijacked via bit-meddling Feng Shui [The Register]

Flip Feng Shui, quicker than the human eye

Security researchers at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam have found a way to subvert virtual machines using a combination of hardware and software shenanigans. The end result is the ability to flip bits in another VM's memory to weaken its encryption or mess with its operation.…

A Russian cyber-gang, the Oracle MICROS hack, and five more POS makers in crims' sights [The Register]

Who, what, when, why, how?

When hackers, believed to be a Russian crime gang, broke into Oracle-owned payment terminal biz MICROS, it was assumed the crooks were snooping around other register makers, too.…

Russia tells Google to cough up some loose change in Android monopoly probe [The Register]

Yandex complaint leads to tiny payout

Updated  Russia's Federal Antimonopoly Service (FAS) has fined Google 468 million rubles ($6.8m) on charges that its Android operating system has been illegally disadvantaging other software vendors.…

New trailers: Rogue One, Marvel's Luke Cage, Amazon's Transparent, and more [The Verge - All Posts]

As I watched through Stranger Things over the last two weeks (I finally finished it — promise not to spoil anything here), one thing I kept thinking about was what the show would be like as a more traditional 24-episode per season series. Because in every single episode of Stranger Things, the reveals come fast — there's almost no wasted time or filler plot lines.

It's a pretty wonderful shift from something like, say, Lost, where information is doled out like dog treats, given infrequently and only to those willing to sit and stay long enough to receive it. Stranger Things' pacing is downright addictive — it's the TV equivalent to finishing an entire bag of Sour Patch Kids in one sitting and miraculously not getting that weird numb...

Continue reading…

Kenny Baker, the man behind science fiction’s most famous robot, has passed away [The Verge - All Posts]

British actor Kenny Baker, the man who portrayed one of science fiction’s most iconic robots, R2-D2, has passed away according to the Guardian. He was 81 years old.

Baker first portrayed the character due to his height - three feet, eight inches. "I got the job right away," he told interviewers. He endured extreme temperatures inside the robotic prop during filming, but returned to play the robot again in the Empire Strikes Back Return of the Jedi, as well as the later prequel trilogy. He was listed in the credits for The Force Awakens as "R2-D2 Consultant".

Baker was born in Birmingham in 1934, and began acting at the age of 16, joining a number of troupes before getting his break in 1977. He also appeared in films...

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MIT and Microsoft Research made a 'smart' tattoo that remotely controls your phone [The Verge - All Posts]

A group of PhD students from the MIT Media Lab and researchers from Microsoft Research have come up with the ultimate wearable: a temporary tattoo that can turn into a touchpad, remotely control your smartphone, or share data using NFC.

The technology, which is described on MIT's website and will be presented in full at a wearables symposium next month, is called DuoSkin. The researchers say you can design a circuit using any graphic software, stamp out the tattoo in gold leaf (which is conductive to electricity), and then apply other commodity materials and components that would make the tattoo interactive.

The paper presents three key use cases for the tattoo: you could use it to turn your skin into a trackpad, design it to change...

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The new trailer for Donald Glover’s Atlanta is equal parts drama and comedy [The Verge - All Posts]

The first teaser for Donald Glover’s Atlanta didn’t give away much about what it would be about, as much as it gave off a neat vibe. With just a couple of weeks before the show premieres, a new trailer has dropped which has gotten us really interested in watching.

From this trailer, it certainly looks as though it’s going to be a nice blend of comedy and drama. Speaking at the Television Critics Awards, Glover noted that "The thesis with the show was kind of to show people how it felt to be black."

Announced last year, Atlanta is about Earn (played by Glover), a loner who returns home to Atlanta, where he gets caught up in the local rap scene when his cousin, Alfred Miles (Brian Tyee Henry) becomes the next big thing.

Atlanta will...

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The first ever Dragon Awards shortlist aims to be the next major award for science fiction fans [The Verge - All Posts]

DragonCon, Atlanta Georgia’s annual science fiction and fantasy convention turns 30 this year, and with the anniversary, they’ve instituted a new genre award: the Dragon Award. The convention’s organizers released the nominee ballot yesterday, and it’s an intriguing list of works that might end up being a bit of a compromise between various factions within fandom.

In 2014 and 2015, an argument had begun to brew within the science fiction community. A group of fans had begun to take issue with the Hugo Awards: science fiction’s top honor. Calling themselves the Sad Puppies, they felt that the award was becoming less accessible to fandom at large, confined to a smaller group that were pushing a political and social agenda. On the other...

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Introducing 1,000 Words, a podcast that describes internet pictures in binaural audio [The Verge - All Posts]

It's a familiar problem for podcast listener: a host vaguely references a picture or a video or something in their recording booth, but you can't see what it is this person is talking about. This happened recently on Vergecast 214. Yeah, a video would solve this problem, but you're standing on the train sandwiched between strangers or driving a car or jogging. Isn't that what you listen to podcasts for? You can't spend that time on Google, Reddit, or Tumblr, you can only rely on your ears.

That's where this experimental podcast comes into play. Meet 1,000 Words. The Verge Extras podcast, hosted by editor of Circuit Breaker Paul Miller and social media manager Dami Lee, is dedicated exclusively to describing pictures from the internet.

"...

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Twitter might be bringing Night Mode to iPhone users [The Verge - All Posts]

Last month, Twitter added a night mode for Android users, hoping that it would drive people to use the app and boost its flagging user-base. The update wasn’t extended to iOS users, who were left it in the dark (no pun intended). Now, it looks like Twitter might finally be adding night mode to its iOS app soon: it’s included in the latest beta build for iOS.

The setting is only available for beta users. The feature can be found in settings, where there’s a new night mode toggle option.

Night mode for iOS looks very similar to its Android counterpart with its navy blue color scheme. Unfortunately, there’s no way to automatically turn on night mode based on what time of day it is or based on your phone’s display...

Continue reading…

Tonight's SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launch: start time, live stream, and what to expect [The Verge - All Posts]

If you find yourself without Saturday night plans this evening, why not enjoy a nice SpaceX launch? The company’s eighth Falcon 9 launch of this year is scheduled to take off tonight from Cape Canaveral, Florida at 1:26AM ET, sending a Japanese communications satellite — called JCSAT-16 — into orbit around Earth. And no SpaceX launch is complete these days without a rocket landing attempt afterward. Just a few minutes after the Falcon 9 takes off tonight, a majority of the vehicle will try to land upright on one of SpaceX’s floating drone ships, "Of Course I Still Love You."

Continue reading…

Asus may go round with the ZenWatch 3 [The Verge - All Posts]

To put it lightly, Asus' latest ZenWatch has not been among our favorite Android Wear watches. But now it looks like Asus is about to give it another go, and the watch's hardware may look a lot better this time around.

Photos of what may well be the ZenWatch 3 started floating around the internet on Friday, supposedly after China's telecom regulator briefly published photos of the device taken during an inspection. While that's not always the best evidence on its own, it's backed up by FCC filings from earlier in the week indicating a round design as well.

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Breaking Bad's Michelle MacLaren to direct World War II film The Nightingale [The Verge - All Posts]

Michelle MacLaren has signed on to direct a film adaptation of The Nightingale, a 2015 novel about French sisters trying to survive World War II. This'll be MacLaren's first big-screen feature, which is something a lot of people have been waiting for.

MacLaren has primarily been working in TV until now, executive producing Breaking Bad and directing some the show's most memorable episodes; more recently, she's directed several episodes of Game of Thrones. Then in 2014, she signed on to direct Wonder Woman, but dropped out just months later over "creative differences." So we've been waiting to see what she'd take on next.

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Today’s Tech Oligarchs [Transterrestrial Musings]

…are worse than robber barons. Yes. Yes they are.

Venezuela [Transterrestrial Musings]

No, it’s not a “humanitarian” crisis. It’s just another example of the inevitable failure of socialism. [Update a couple minutes later] Is “liberalism” creating a soulless monoculture? There’s nothing liberal about it. It’s totalitarian.

Chromebooks [Transterrestrial Musings]

…are about to get awesome. This seems like what I probably need. My Gateway laptop is impossible to use on a plane unless I’m in first class (which I rarely am), and it’s getting a little long in the tooth, with some keys starting to fail. It also tends to hang after a while in … Continue reading Chromebooks

Black Hollywood Actor: ‘Thank God, One Day Trump is Gonna Die’ [Weasel Zippers]

Where’s the outrage over this comment? Via Truth Revolt: Donald Glover, star of TV’s Community, can’t wait for the “awesome” day when Donald Trump dies, and the media couldn’t care less that he said so publicly. In a recent Television Critics Association press conference, Glover said: “Thank God, one day Trump is gonna die. That […]

Gloria Steinem Blames Hillary Clinton’s Low Approval Ratings On Sexism… [Weasel Zippers]

Obviously. Via Washington Examiner: Feminist icon Gloria Steinem said Friday that she believes Hillary Clinton’s low favorability ratings are at least partially due to her being a woman. She said that isn’t the only reason the Democratic nominee has hit her lowest approval ratings in 24 years, but the subliminal connections associated with her and […]

BREAKING: Two Men, Including Imam, Shot Walking Home From Mosque…UPDATE: Some Already Blaming ‘Islamophobia’, Trump… [Weasel Zippers]

Report: Two men shot outside Queens mosque. pic.twitter.com/bvGNVqrFEi — Fox News (@FoxNews) August 13, 2016 Via NY Post: A imam and a friend heading home from prayers at a Queens mosque were gunned down Saturday in what authorities are investigating as a hate crime. One of the men was killed in the 2 p.m. shooting […]

Memos Show Dem Official Referred To Hillary Clinton As Nominee Before Primaries Even Started… [Weasel Zippers]

Via Daily Caller: Hillary Clinton was referred to as the Democratic nominee by a party official in multiple internal memos before the Democratic primaries even began, documents obtained by The Daily Caller reveal. The memos were sent from Andrew Piatt, southern political director for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, to multiple Democratic congressmen and party […]

Pelosi Says She’s Been Flooded With ‘Obscene’ Phone Calls Since DCCC Computer Hack [Weasel Zippers]

Via Washington Times: House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said Saturday that she’s been slammed with “obscene and sick calls” after a hacker posted Democratic congressional lawmakers’ personal contact information online. The information was apparently stolen in a hack of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which has personal contact and other information for all of the […]

BREAKING: Gunshots Reportedly Fired In Crabtree Valley Mall, Raleigh NC, On Lockdown…UPDATE: Video People Fleeing Mall, Portion Evacuated…UPDATE: No Suspects Arrested, No Gun Injuries Found… [Weasel Zippers]

Video purportedly of people fleeing the mall: Someone just got shot at Crabtree and it was so scary me and Olivia are crying oh my god live footage !!!! pic.twitter.com/IAymO1xo8C — LB ☻ (@Laurrrenbaker) August 13, 2016 Update: Reports are there were shots in the food court, but not clear that anyone was shot at […]

Obama Regime Seeks To Restrict Gunsmiths [Weasel Zippers]

Anything that can make it more difficult and more challenging to make, amend or have guns. Via Daily Caller: Gunsmiths around the country say they were blindsided by President Obama’s latest executive order that would make their trade qualify as manufacturing and therefore eligible for all the mandated regulations and fees that go along with […]

Margaret Sanger Award Recipient And Pro-Abortion Fanatic Nancy Pelosi On Zika Virus: “You Know How I Am About Babies And This Is About Babies”… [Weasel Zippers]

Yeah, we know how you are about babies. Via CNS News: At a Capitol Hill press conference on Thursday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said the Zika virus threat is “all about babies.” “The Zika in the Southern part of our country is in our country, and because it hasn’t hit home in [a […]

BREAKING: Man Sets Swiss Train On Fire, Then Attacks 6 Passengers With Knife, Including 6 Yr Old Child… [Weasel Zippers]

No name on this guy yet. Via Daily Mail: Seven people have been injured after a man attacked passengers on a train in Switzerland with ‘fire and a knife’. Swiss police have confirmed the train has been sealed off an it is understood the county’s interior minister is holding an emergency meeting over the incident. […]

Krauthammer: Putin May Be Ready To Make His Move On Ukraine Because Of Weak White House [Weasel Zippers]

Krauthammer is referencing the Gleiwitz incident, where Hitler accused Poland of attacking Germany by a supposed ‘attack’ at a soldiers’ outpost at Gleiwitz. Germany used dead bodies from camps dressed them in Polish uniforms, to show evidence of the attack. That became the excuse to invade Poland and officially start World War II. If he […]

French Satirical Magazine Charlie Hebdo Mocks Muslims … Death Threats Ensue… [Weasel Zippers]

Shocker. Via Times Of Israel: The Paris prosecutor’s office has opened an investigation into death threats against the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which was the target of a sophisticated terror attack in 2015. Office spokeswoman Agnes Thibault-Lecuivre said Wednesday that the investigation for “written death threats” follows about a dozen postings in July and […]

Police Officer Killed In New Mexico By Men Already Wanted For Murder [Weasel Zippers]

You never know who you are stopping. Via ABC: A 36-year-old man reportedly wanted for aggravated murder in Ohio has been arrested and charged in the shooting death of a New Mexico police officer after a routine traffic stop, according to the Doña Ana County Sheriff’s Department. Jesse Hanes, whose last known address was in […]

Fidel Castro Uses 90th Birthday To Bash Obama… [Weasel Zippers]

For not being more pro-Communism. Via Reuters: Fidel Castro thanked Cubans for their tributes to mark his 90th birthday on Saturday in a meandering column carried by state-run media in which the iconic leftist revolutionary also lambasted old foe United States. Cuba went into overdrive this month honoring the retired “El Comandante” who spearheaded its […]

Hillary Clinton Addresses Exhaustion on Campaign Trail, Health and Exercise Habits [Weasel Zippers]

I really want some reporter to ask her to demonstrate what yoga she practices, because people who practice yoga have more flexibility and ease of movement and she has none. Via Free Beacon: Hillary Clinton addressed exhaustion on the campaign trail and some of her health and exercise habits during a podcast released by her […]

Vets Hang ‘All Lives Matter’ Banner After Town Mayor Refuses To Remove BLM Banner At City Hall [Weasel Zippers]

Via Daily Caller: A group of war veterans in Massachusetts hung an “All Lives Matter” banner over their town’s American Legion Post because they are tired of the protests over a”Black Lives Matter” banner the mayor refuses to take down. “We seen what went on with City Hall. We’re not happy about it. We’re not […]

Senator Demands Answers From Loretta Lynch: Why Did DOJ Nix Clinton Foundation Investigation? [Weasel Zippers]

Saving grace here may be that U.S. Attorney in New York may have opened one independently anyway, under his own power. Via Daily Caller: Texas Sen. John Cornyn is demanding answers from Attorney General Loretta Lynch about the Justice Department’s decision earlier this year to decline an FBI recommendation to investigate the Clinton Foundation. The […]

Feminist Complains That Her Anti-Capitalism Quote Isn’t Making Her Any Money… [Weasel Zippers]

Via Vox: What do you do when your most famous quote becomes an internet meme? What if that meme is then commodified and marketed by other people, with no consideration of or concern for how you might feel about it? In progressive circles, Flavia Dzodan is what has become known as an intersectional feminist — […]

A Short And Sweet Promo Post – Free Range Oyster [According To Hoyt]

A Short And Sweet Promo Post – Free Range Oyster

J.M. Ney-Grimm

The Troll’s Belt

Young deceit sprouts timeless trouble.

Motherless Brys Arnsson digs himself into trouble. Bad trouble. Tricked by a troll in J.M. Ney-Grimm’s richly imagined North-lands, Brys must dig himself and his best friend back out of danger. But that requires courage… and self-honesty. Traits Brys lacks at depth.

A twist on a classic, THE TROLL’S BELT builds from humor-threaded conflict to white-knuckle suspense.

John Van Stry

Wolf Killer

The Hammer Commission

With having to leave the Commission for a year while things cool off politically, Mark finds that the Church has loaned him out to the FBI, who have been trying for years now to get an experienced monster and demon expert in their newest division, to help train and educate the agents there on just what they will be facing. Finding out that Mark actually is one of those very monsters has made them want him even more; not just for what he can bring to the table, but because they do need to check off that newest minority checkbox, even if no one knows they exist.

Mark doesn’t mind the new assignment, being closer to home, it means it will be easier to visit with family, and the agents all seem nice enough. Plus the FBI has a bigger budget and gets a lot nicer toys than Mark is used to. However, while Mark knows how to deal with devils, demons, and even the nastier monsters out there, he doesn’t know anything about how to deal with a sociopath werewolf who has gone full psycho and started to murder co-eds.

That’s more of a ‘human’ problem, after all.


Deciphering Hillary’s Statist Economic Plan: A Helpful Translation into English [International Liberty]

I need combat pay. Or maybe some kind of bonus for pain and suffering. First, I had to watch Donald Trump’s incoherent speech on the economy and try to decipher his mish-mash economic plan.

And then, without the benefit of a lengthy vacation or counseling for post-foolishness stress disorder, I had to endure Hillary Clinton’s speech about the economy.

Though I will admit it was very coherent and there wasn’t much to decipher. As I pointed out in this interview, she wants more wasteful spending, more punitive taxes, and more stifling regulation.

There are two points from this interview that deserve some additional emphasis.

  1. Copying Obama and referring to subsidies and handouts as being an “investment” doesn’t make bigger government a wise use of other people’s money.
  2. Keynesian spending is a scam. It’s the fiscal version of a perpetual motion machine that ostensibly spits out dollar bills when you put quarters in a slot.

I closed the interview by pointing out that it makes no sense to make America more like Greece or Venezuela.

Yet Hillary is too clever to say that’s her agenda. To clear up this confusion, here are a few phrases from her recent speech in Michigan. I’ve helpfully translated them into English.

  • …support advanced manufacturing” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • a lot of urgent and important work to do” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • go out and make that happen” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • enormous capacity for clean energy production” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • if we do it together” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • things that your government could do” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • I will have your back every single day” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • make our economy work for everyone” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • restore fairness to our economy” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • go to bat for working families” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • pass the biggest investment” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • modernizing our roads, our bridges” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • help cities like Detroit and Flint” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • repair schools and failing water systems” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • we should be ambitious” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • connect every household in America to broadband” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • build a cleaner, more resilient power grid” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • creating an infrastructure bank” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • we’re going to invest $10 billion” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • bring business, government, and communities together” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • fight to make college tuition-free” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • liberate millions of people who already have student debt” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • support high-quality union training programs” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • We will do more” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • Investments at home” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • we need to make it fairer” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • we will fight for a more progressive…tax code” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • pay a new exit tax” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • Wall Street, corporations, and the super-rich, should finally pay their fair share” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • I support the so-called ‘Buffett Rule,” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • add a new tax on multi-millionaires” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • close the carried interest loophole” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • Just think about what we could do with those $4 billion dollars” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • I want to invest” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • affordable childcare available to all Americans” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • Paid family leave” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • Raising the federal minimum wage” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • expanding Social Security” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • strengthening unions” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • improve the Affordable Care Act” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • a public option health insurance plan” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.
  • build a new future with clean energy” = Notwithstanding all the previous failures of government, both in America and elsewhere in the world, I’m going to make American more like Greece and Venezuela by using coercion to impose more spending, taxes, and regulation.

The only good news is that Hillary is an incremental statist. Unlike crazy Bernie Sanders, she doesn’t want to become Greece at 90 miles-per-hour. She’s content to travel in the wrong direction at a steady 55 miles-per-hour.

And since Greece is such a basket case, even two terms of Hillary Clinton probably would only result in America having French-type levels of economic freedom. Or lack thereof, to be more accurate.

In other words, it will take a lot of bad policy over a couple of decades to completely hollow out America’s economy. The already-baked-into-the-cake expansion of entitlements will take us part of the way to that unfortunate destination.

And, to mix my metaphors, Hillary will be content to add a few more straws to the camel’s back.


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